The object with the larger surface area will experience a higher air resistance force, leading to a lower terminal velocity compared to the object with a smaller surface area of the same mass. This is because the larger surface area increases the frictional force acting against the object's motion.
Doubling the surface area on which a force is being exerted reduces the pressure by half. This is because pressure is force divided by surface area. So, if the force remains the same while the surface area doubles, the pressure decreases.
A mirror will always reflect light. It bounces off the mirror's surface at the same angle it hits it.
To increase the pressure exerted on an object, you can either decrease the area over which the force is applied or increase the force applied on the object. This can be achieved by either applying a greater force on the same surface area or applying the same force on a smaller surface area.
To achieve the same ray of light after passing through prisms, the prisms must have the same angles and refractive indices. This helps to ensure that the light rays are refracted and dispersed in a consistent manner, allowing them to merge back into a single ray. Additionally, the prisms should be aligned properly to minimize deviations in the path of the light.
Given any rectangular prism, there are infinitely many other rectangular prisms with exactly the same surface area.
Given the surface area of a rectangular prism, there are infinitely many rectangular prisms possible.
Yes.
Yes, they can. They can also have the same surface area, but different volume.
Yes, they can. They can also have the same surface area, but different volume.
No. There is no reason for the surface area of all triangular prisms to be the same always. For example, increasing the length of the prism only adds area; there is nothing to counteract this increase, so the area must be different.The same applies to all prisms and 3-dimensional objects: changing the dimensions can alter the area.
well, they can, but they dont have to be no. :)
For the same base dimensions (base area) and the same height, the rectangular prism has more surface area.
Yes, you can.
figures with the same volume does not have the same surface area.
It could be anything.... the question needs to be more specific.
No. The fact that the bases have the same area says nothing about the shape of the bases.