The acceleration of an object depends on the weight of an object and the amount of force applied
What is Newtons second law
if a mouse stops moving because it smells cheese what is its energy
Potential
The letters on a element is what
example: lithium Li
Element symbol
which formula is fake
M=f/a
A=f/m
F=a/m
F=m/a
F=a/m
How is crude oil extracted from the crust?
On land, oil can be drilled with an apparatus called an oil rig or drilling rig. Offshore, oil is drilled from an oil platform. Most modern wells use an air rotary drilling rig, which can operate 24 hours a day. In this process, engines power a drill bit.
the mass of an atom, calculated by adding the number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus of the atom
Atomic mass
what is a Newton used to measure
Force
Where does radiation come from?
Radiation is naturally present in our environment, radiation can be produced artificially, as in medical x-rays and microwaves for cooking. Nonetheless, most people are not aware of all the natural and man-made sources of radiation in our environment. For additional information, see Radiation All Around Us.
What is barium’s atomic number
56
According to Newton what happens when you let an untied ballon go.
3rd Law
Air will rush out of the balloon forcing the balloon to move through the air in the opposite direction, but equal in force.
Which green house gas is made by automobiles
Carbon dioxide
Hat is a row called on the periodic table
Period
Explain how each of Newtons laws is presented in a game of tug of war.
First Law: The rope will stay in the same place until the tugging starts (a new force is introduced)
Second Law: We could measure a team’s force that they can pull the rope with based on their body masses and the acceleration that they are causing the rope to move at.
Third: 1 team pulls the rope towards themselves with a certain amount of force and the opposing team is also putting force on the rope. The same amount of force is applied from the ground to the people as they are putting on the ground.
one of several forms of a single element, which contains the same number of protons, but different numbers of neutrons
Isotope