
Other's Responses
-
well thats convenient
-
Genius.
-
shouldnt the crane be on the other side??
-
That is one well-drawn crane
-
that crane was drawn so well i thought it was part of the picture lmao.
-
That crane is so well drawn I actually thought it was part of the question at first. o.O
-
Yes the crane should be on the other side, this explains why the student had so much time during a physics exam to draw cranes........
-
He probably spent more time drawing that crane then it would have taken him to find the answer to the question. That kid's hilarious though!
-
thats very good artwork its a shame he wasnt in art :)
-
Well its kinda correct
-
I'm afraid that crane won't do much for your problem on that side of the slope.
-
why bother with tedious calculations...........the crane will do the work. ha ha ha
-
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm..........yyyyeessss:) soooooooo goooooood:) :P XD
-
weight shouldn't be used to describe the SI Unit of Newtons, it has a weight of 15 kg and a "mass" of 147.15 Newtons. and assuming it's frictionless since we don't know what substance the surface is composed of, it takes 73.575 Joules of energy. about as much you exert while swinging a baseball bat
-
you do realise that cranes can move right... so its not relevant which side its on!
-
Should have been a bulldozer
-
LAWYERED! XD
-
What's point of ramp then?
-
Hooray for Physics!
-
call in reinforcements lolo tiss lol
-
Damn I love cranes
-
A 15 kg crate only weighs 147 newtons at the surface of the Earth.
-
I need this person to draw that on all my papers.
-
THis comment will get the most thumbs up!!!! :)
-
W= F*d W=150N* 3.464m W=519Joule
-
Bob the Builder YES WE CAN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
-
Hooray for physics!
-
w=F.d d= h cos theta or c= square root of (a^2 + b^2) b= square root of (c^2 - a^2) b= square root of (4^2 - 2^2) b= square root of ( 16-4) b = 3.464m therefore: Work= (150N) * b= square root of (c^2 - a^2) Work = (150N)(3.464m) Work = 519 N-m or Joule david
-
Wow, he even had a yellow pencil.
-
WRONG!!! you still have to pull the lever with one of those newtons/something
well thats convenient