Electric room heaters use a concave mirror to reflect infrared (IR) radiation from hot coils. Note that IR follows the same law of reflection as visible light.
Find the magnification of the heater element, given that the mirror has a radius of curvature of 46cm and produces an image of the coils 3.4 m away from the mirror?
Electric room heaters use a concave mirror to reflect infrared (IR) radiation from hot coils. Note...
Electric room heaters use a concave mirror to reflect infrared (IR) radiation from hot coils. Note that IR follows the same law of reflection as visible light. Find the magnification of the heater element, given that the mirror has a radius of curvature of 52 cm and produces an image of the coils 2.6 m away from the mirror.
(2%) Problem 15: Electric room heaters use a concave mirror to reflect infrared (IR) radiation from hot coils. Note that IR follows the same law of reflection as visible light. A Find the magnification of the heater element, given that the mirror has a radius of curvature of 46 cm and produces an image of the coils 3.1 m away from the mirror. Grade Summary Deductions 0% Potential 100% m = sin() cos( tan() 7 8 9 HOME Submissions
Consider a room heater that uses a concave mirror to reflect infrared radiation from hot coils. The mirror has a radius of curvature of 54.5 cm and produces an image of the coils 3.25 m away from the mirror. Find the magnification of the heater element. Note that its large magnitude helps spread out the reflected energy. __________
pls answer a & b asap thanks i will rate Consider a room heater that uses a concave mirror to reflect infrared radiation from hot coils. The mirror has a radius of curvature of 55.0 cm and produces an image of the coils 2.70 m away from the mirror. Calculate the intensity of IR radiation in W/m2 projected by the concave mirror on a person 2.70 m away. Assume that the heating element radiates 1,350 W and has an area...
Additional Materials eBook Notes Ask Your T My . -1 points OSUnPhys1 35.2 P041 Consider a room heater that uses a concave mirror to reflect infrared radiation from hot coils. The mirror has a radius of curvature of 45.0 cm and produces an image of the coils 3.40 m away from the mirror. Calculate the intensity of IR radiation in W/m2 projected by the concave mirror on a person 3.40 m away. Assume that the heating element radiates 1,650 W...
need help. please answer #8-11 8. As an object moves away from a plane mirror on a wall and you observe the object and the image from the position of the mirror, the image of the object A. gets smaller B. may or may not get smaller, depending on where the observer is positioned. C. Is always a real image, no matter how far you are from the mirror. D. Changes from being a virtual to a real image as...
Deep in the physics and astronomy basement storeroom, you find a very large concave spherical mirror from an old telescope. The mirror is 2 m across, and has a radius of curvature of 14.0 m. Because this is just a small piece of such a large sphere, the angle of incidence for on-axis rays will always be below 5°, minimizing spherical aberration You try out the mirror for use as a full-length wall mirror. If you look at yourself in...
Note: This test contains ten questions from chapter 19 to chapter 27. For full credit, you should show all the steps of your numerical answers. No credit would be earned for just circling the right answers. Chapter 19 - Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy 1. Two point charges are of + 7 uC and - 4 C are held at the corners of a rectangle as shown. The lengths of the sides of rectangle are 0.15 m, and 0.05...
need ans for the following questions, the last 3 pages for more info. Questions: more info: expermint e/m avr=1.71033*10^11 7 2 points of the following options, which conditions for V or I produce the largest radius of the electron beam path r? Hint: Use e/m= 2V (5/4)*aP/(Nuo Ir) Maximum land Maximum V O Maximum land Minimum V Minimum I and Maximum V Minimum I and Minimum V 8 2 points By what factor will change if the radius of the...