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A Gust Of Wind Blows An Apple From A Tree.

A gust of wind blows an apple from a tree. As the apple falls, the gravatational force on the apple is ...?

again, use pythagarian theorem

a^2 + b^2 = c^2
2.25^2 + 1.05^2 = c^2
c = 6.165N

since you have all 3 sides of the triangle, you can use any trig, (sin, cos, tan) but i suggest you use the original information.
2.25 and 1.05 are both the legs of the triangle, therefore, you have to use Tan to find the angle.

since we are trying to find the angle, use Tan^-1

Tan^-1 (1.05 / 2.25)
angle = 25.02 degrees E of S

A gust of wind blows an apple from a tree. As the apple falls, the force of gravity on the apple is 9.44 N?

A gust of wind blows an apple from a tree. As the apple falls, the force of gravity on the apple is 9.44 N downward, and the force of the wind on the apple is 1.55 N to the right. What is the magnitude of the net external force on the apple? Answer in units of N. What is the direction of the net external force on the apple (measured from the downward vertical, so that the angle to the right of the downward is positive? Answer in units of dregrees.

A gust of wind blows an apple from a tree. As the apple falls, the force of gravity on the apple is 9.34 N dow?

That force will be the hypotenuse of a right triangle where one leg is 9.34 and the other leg is 1.34.

Use the Pythagorean Theorem to calculate it.

c^2 = a^2 + b^2

c = sq rt (a^2 + b^2)

c = sq rt (9.34^2 + 1.34^2)

c = 9.44 N

A gust of wind blows an apple from a tree.?

we juss need to take vector sum of the two forces. assuming the wind is directly in horizontal direction....... sqrt(9.25sq+1.05sq)=9.3N

A gust of wind blows an apple from a tree. As the apple falls, the force of gravity on the apple is 9.19 N..?

part A:

A gust of wind blows an apple from a tree.
As the apple falls, the force of gravity on the
apple is 9.19 N downward, and the force of
the wind on the apple is 1.93 N to the right.
What is the magnitude of the net external
force on the apple?
Answer in units of N

Part B:

What is the direction of the net external force
on the apple (measured from the downward
vertical, so that the angle to the right of
downward is positive)?
Answer in units of derees

None of course. After all, the candles were lit one week ago. The gust of wind blew out six candles and the other four burned out days ago.What? Not the answer you were looking for? If you think that it’s the wrong answer then you need to provide more information otherwise I have to make assumptions.Perhaps the assumptions you wanted were that the candles were lit minutes ago, the gust of wind arrived seconds ago. Then the answer is 10. You see, the candles are trick candles that use a fuse and so “re-light” themselves after a gust of wind. The blowing out part of course is that the candles, which had been perched precariously on the window sill, were blown out of the room to the street below.What? Still not the answer you were looking for? Not sure why you don’t want this answer because it, like the first answer, fits the facts offered. You’ll need to provide more facts.The problem with this word problem (as with almost every other word problem out there) is that it relies on you making the exact same assumptions that the writer of the word problem made when they created the problem. If I make different, but perfectly valid, assumptions I get a different answer. Heck, I could even give you an answer where there were more than 10 candles lit and it would still fit the facts offered.

Physics? Magnitude and direction of the net force on a apple?

The forces are at right angles to each other, so
Fnet = √[2.25² + 1.05²] = 2.483 N
Θ = arctan[1.05/2.25] = 25° from vertical and to the right.

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