Jim's maths and physics problems
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Re: Jim's maths and physics problems
Problem 4
An illuminated object is 23 cm in front of a convex lens with a focal length of 17 cm. Calculate the position and magnification of the image produced, and comment intelligently on the nature of the image.
An illuminated object is 23 cm in front of a convex lens with a focal length of 17 cm. Calculate the position and magnification of the image produced, and comment intelligently on the nature of the image.
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Re: Jim's maths and physics problems
I calculate the image to be roughly in front of the lens, and it appears to me to be a bleak representation of the future of a Capitalist driven society.JimC wrote:Problem 4
An illuminated object is 23 cm in front of a convex lens with a focal length of 17 cm. Calculate the position and magnification of the image produced, and comment intelligently on the nature of the image.
"The fact is that far more crime and child abuse has been committed by zealots in the name of God, Jesus and Mohammed than has ever been committed in the name of Satan. Many people don't like that statement but few can argue with it."
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Re: Jim's maths and physics problems
Fail...Don Juan Demarco wrote:I calculate the image to be roughly in front of the lens, and it appears to me to be a bleak representation of the future of a Capitalist driven society.JimC wrote:Problem 4
An illuminated object is 23 cm in front of a convex lens with a focal length of 17 cm. Calculate the position and magnification of the image produced, and comment intelligently on the nature of the image.
(especially since it is on the far side of the lens)
And where was last week's physics homework, young man?

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Re: Jim's maths and physics problems
It is both in that box on your desk and not in that box on the desk.JimC wrote:Fail...Don Juan Demarco wrote:I calculate the image to be roughly in front of the lens, and it appears to me to be a bleak representation of the future of a Capitalist driven society.JimC wrote:Problem 4
An illuminated object is 23 cm in front of a convex lens with a focal length of 17 cm. Calculate the position and magnification of the image produced, and comment intelligently on the nature of the image.
(especially since it is on the far side of the lens)
And where was last week's physics homework, young man?
"The fact is that far more crime and child abuse has been committed by zealots in the name of God, Jesus and Mohammed than has ever been committed in the name of Satan. Many people don't like that statement but few can argue with it."
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Re: Jim's maths and physics problems
Would have been a good answer...Don Juan Demarco wrote:It is both in that box on your desk and not in that box on the desk.JimC wrote:Fail...Don Juan Demarco wrote:I calculate the image to be roughly in front of the lens, and it appears to me to be a bleak representation of the future of a Capitalist driven society.JimC wrote:Problem 4
An illuminated object is 23 cm in front of a convex lens with a focal length of 17 cm. Calculate the position and magnification of the image produced, and comment intelligently on the nature of the image.
(especially since it is on the far side of the lens)
And where was last week's physics homework, young man?

Except the homework was all classical physics...

That Schroedinger cat has a lot to answer for...

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Re: Jim's maths and physics problems
To be fair, a lot of people have been calling BS for a while. The only thing I did differently was to ask questions which many people visiting here are capable of answering, or understanding the answers given. It's hard to expose flaws in someones understanding when they talk about Ph.D. level stuff. It becomes a battle of BS, and when you have a good salesperson vs a scientist, the salesperson will win out with years of practice.colubridae wrote: How did you know you would expose farsight's twaddle so easily. We've been trying for nigh on 50 pages?
Asking simple questions on familiar territory is a good way to expose when someone is making stuff up. That's why they don't have physics or maths oral exams. You sit a test and answer questions to demonstrate competence and understanding. You have to actually supply proofs and choose what equations will solve the problems.
I can well understand people getting stuck on really complex second order differential equations or (insert gibberish here), but how can someone who doesn't even understand Newton or simple algebra be credibly engaging with something like String theory?
I like that we've gone to these Q&A, IMO it is one of the best ways to get an appreciation for science - by seeing what the answers look like and how they are arrived at. It's not a spectator sport.
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Re: Jim's maths and physics problems
Don Juan Demarco wrote:I calculate the image to be roughly in front of the lens, and it appears to me to be a bleak representation of the future of a Capitalist driven society.JimC wrote:Problem 4
An illuminated object is 23 cm in front of a convex lens with a focal length of 17 cm. Calculate the position and magnification of the image produced, and comment intelligently on the nature of the image.
Fuck me not even gone back to the intenet.
hope it's 1/u + 1/v = 1/f
in which case
1/23 + 1/v = 1/ 17
1/v = 1/17 - 1/23
gives 1/v = (23-17)/ 23*17
v = 391/6 = 65 1/6 cms
is it erect and real?
stretching memory now.
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Re: Jim's maths and physics problems
1/u +1/v = 1/fJimC wrote:Problem 4
An illuminated object is 23 cm in front of a convex lens with a focal length of 17 cm. Calculate the position and magnification of the image produced, and comment intelligently on the nature of the image.
u=0.23, f=0.17
1/v= (1/0.17) - (1/0.23)
v=0.651 metres
The image is inverted.
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Re: Jim's maths and physics problems
I realised that half an hour ago while sitting in the bath.JimC wrote:The error was that the copper is losing heat energy, and so it is a negative term, leading to:DP wrote:Hmmm,JimC wrote:Problem 2
A 2 kg mass of copper at 250 degrees C is added to 20 litres of water at 20 degrees C.
Assuming no loss of heat energy to the surroundings, calculate the temperature at thermal equilibrium, given that the specific heat capacity of water and copper are 4200 j/kg/degree and 390 j/kg/degree respectively.
2*390(T-250)=20*4200(T-20)
780T-195,000=84,000T-1,680,000
1,485,000=83,220T
T=17.84
That makes no sense, think I fucked up somewhere.
2*390(250 - T) = 20*4200(T - 20)
When solved by the same method you used, the temperature at thermal equilibrium comes to 22.12 degrees C...

Hadn't my brain switch on this morning.

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Re: Jim's maths and physics problems
I had a rather nice Casio calculator at school. I could press the enter button 61 times in 10 seconds.
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Re: Jim's maths and physics problems
This one might be quite fun!
Calculate escape velocity from the Earths surface
You may use the following assumptions:
radius of earth = 6400km
mass of earth=5.97 × 10^24 kilograms
gravitational constant = 6.673 × 10-11 m3 kg-1 s-2
In practical terms, explain why a higher velocity would be needed to achieve orbit.
Calculate escape velocity from the Earths surface
You may use the following assumptions:
radius of earth = 6400km
mass of earth=5.97 × 10^24 kilograms
gravitational constant = 6.673 × 10-11 m3 kg-1 s-2
In practical terms, explain why a higher velocity would be needed to achieve orbit.
Re: Jim's maths and physics problems
tried the chemistry one
2 C8H18 +25 O2-----16CO2+18H20
and I did the maths for the masses but when I added up both sides of the equation to check at the end they did not match ....So I gave up like the lazy sod I am !
If nobody else does this one I might try it again later (without the decimal places probably )
2 C8H18 +25 O2-----16CO2+18H20
and I did the maths for the masses but when I added up both sides of the equation to check at the end they did not match ....So I gave up like the lazy sod I am !
If nobody else does this one I might try it again later (without the decimal places probably )




Give me the wine , I don't need the bread
- JimC
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Re: Jim's maths and physics problems
Correctly balanced equation.Feck wrote:tried the chemistry one
2 C8H18 +25 O2-----16CO2+18H20
and I did the maths for the masses but when I added up both sides of the equation to check at the end they did not match ....So I gave up like the lazy sod I am !
If nobody else does this one I might try it again later (without the decimal places probably )

Using stoichiometry, for every 1 kg of octane, 3.50 kg of O2 is consumed, and 1.42 kg of CO2 and 3.08 kg of H2O are produced...
Is it sad that I have made an Excel sheet (with look-up tables, no less) that performs stoichiometric calculations?

Nurse, where the fuck's my cardigan?
And my gin!
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- JimC
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Re: Jim's maths and physics problems
Both you and colubridae were correct, the image would be 65.17 cm on the other side of the lens. The image is real and inverted, and has a magnification of x2.83Twiglet wrote:1/u +1/v = 1/fJimC wrote:Problem 4
An illuminated object is 23 cm in front of a convex lens with a focal length of 17 cm. Calculate the position and magnification of the image produced, and comment intelligently on the nature of the image.
u=0.23, f=0.17
1/v= (1/0.17) - (1/0.23)
v=0.651 metres
The image is inverted.
I always approach this with my students via lots of prac work (curved mirrors likewise), making a large range of measurements of object and image distances, and teasing out the relationships using the data. Plus lots of ray diagrams, of course...
Nurse, where the fuck's my cardigan?
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Re: Jim's maths and physics problems
JimC wrote:Both you and colubridae were correct, the image would be 65.17 cm on the other side of the lens. The image is real and inverted, and has a magnification of x2.83Twiglet wrote:1/u +1/v = 1/fJimC wrote:Problem 4
An illuminated object is 23 cm in front of a convex lens with a focal length of 17 cm. Calculate the position and magnification of the image produced, and comment intelligently on the nature of the image.
u=0.23, f=0.17
1/v= (1/0.17) - (1/0.23)
v=0.651 metres
The image is inverted.
I always approach this with my students via lots of prac work (curved mirrors likewise), making a large range of measurements of object and image distances, and teasing out the relationships using the data. Plus lots of ray diagrams, of course...

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Salman Rushdie
You talk to God, you're religious. God talks to you, you're psychotic.
House MD
Who needs a meaning anyway, I'd settle anyday for a very fine view.
Sandy Denny
This is the wrong forum for bluffing

Paco
Yes, yes. But first I need to show you this venomous fish!
Calilasseia
I think we should do whatever Pawiz wants.
Twoflower
Bella squats momentarily then waddles on still peeing, like a horse
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