kg
What is mass?
The peak of energy in a wave is also known as this.
What is amplitude? what is an anti-node?
This constant allows for a calculation of force between two masses.
What is Big G?
1.602 x 10^-19 C
What is the fundamental charge? What is the charge of one charged particle?
What is inertia?
Force
What are Newtons?
These variables determine the speed of a wave.
What are wavelength and frequency?
This astronomer's laws explained the motion of planets.
Who is Kepler?
This law calculates the equal force on two charged particles.
What is Coulomb's Law?
A collision can be observed on a velocity-time graph, when this occurs.
Period
What are seconds?
This increases when moving through more dense matter.
What is the speed of sound?
The direction of force making an object rotate.
What is in? inward?
Volts = Amps * Ohms
What is Ohm's Law?
This collision features an object that starts as one and becomes more than one.
What is an explosion?
Energy
What are Joules?
What are length and gravity? gravitational acceleration?
A planet will increase in speed as this gets smaller.
What is the radius? distance between them?
K
What is Coulomb's constant? 9x10^9?
This collision features objects bouncing off of each other, and energy not being conserved.
What is an inelastic collision?
kg*m/s
What is momentum?
The restoring force of a mass-spring oscillator is known by this other name.
What is Hooke's Law? F=k*x?
This law holds true because the two masses exert an equal force on each other.
What is Newton's 3rd Law?
This law holds true because two charges exert an equal force on each other.
What is Newton's 3rd Law?
This collision conserves momentum and kinetic energy
What is perfectly elastic? completely elastic?