Edit Game
Physics Review (Forces and Movement)
 Delete

Use commas to add multiple tags

 Private  Unlisted  Public




Delimiter between question and answer:

Tips:

  • No column headers.
  • Each line maps to a question.
  • If the delimiter is used in a question, the question should be surrounded by double quotes: "My, question","My, answer"
  • The first answer in the multiple choice question must be the correct answer.






 Save   20  Close
A spring has a spring constant of 5 N/cm. What is its extension when loaded with 15 N?
3 cm
Which spring has the greatest spring constant? A or B?
A
A spring has a natural length of 4 cm and when masses are added, its new length is 18 cm. What is the extension?
14 cm
The mass of an astronaut is 70 kg on the Moon. What is the mass of the astronaut on the Earth?
70 kgs
The gravitational strength on Neptune is 11.0 N/kg. If the weight of a rover is 13,200 Newtons, what is the mass of it?
1200 kgs
How fast is the car traveling at 30 seconds?
20 m/s
A dog runs with an initial speed of 7.5 m/s on a waxed floor. It slides to a stop in 15 seconds. What is the acceleration?
-0.5 m/s^2
A roller coasters accelerates from an initial velocity of of 6.0 m/s to a final velocity of 70 m/s over 4 seconds. What's the acceleration?
16 m/s^2
A golf ball accelerates off a tee at 15m/s2, changing its velocity from 0m/s to 50 m/s down the fairway. How long did it take the golf ball to accelerate?
3.3 seconds
A bus starts from rest and accelerates to 14 m/s in 4 s. What is the average acceleration of the bus?
3.5m/s^2
Change in speed or velocity over a specific amount of time. What is this?
Acceleration
How do you calculate average speed?
total distance divided by total time
Dave runs 2000 m in 25 minutes. What is the speed?
80 m/m
"Heavier objects need a larger force to make them move." What Law of Motion is this?
2nd
What Newtons law does this picture represent:
1st Law
What is the resultant force?
None
What is the resultant force?
0 N
The unit of force is...
N (Newton)
TRUE OR FALSE: To represent a force, you can use either the point of application (where the force acts), scalar value, and the direction.
TRUE.
What is the resultant force?
40 N, right