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The mass of the particles that a river can transport is proportional to the sixth power of the speed of the river. A certain river normally flows at a speed of 1 meter per second. What must its speed be in order to transport particles that are twice as massive as usual? 10 times as massive? 100 times as massive?

User Nvidot
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1 Answer

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Answer:


v_2 \approx 1.12246\ m.s^(-1)


v_(10)\approx 1.4678\ m.s^(-1)


v_(100)\approx 1.4678\ m.s^(-1)

Explanation:

Mass of particles that a river can transport,
m\propto\ v^6

where:

v = velocity of river flow

When
v=1\ m.s

then the mass transported,
m \propto 1^6

When mass is twice:


v=\sqrt[6]{2}


v_2 \approx 1.12246\ m.s^(-1)

When mass is 10 times:


v=\sqrt[6]{10}


v_(10)\approx 1.4678\ m.s^(-1)

When mass is 100 times:


v=\sqrt[6]{100}


v_(100)\approx 1.4678\ m.s^(-1)

User Sunil Dodiya
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