- #1
lotusbloom
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can some1 help me w/this question...like i don't know where to start...thanks in advance
A spring is haning down from the ceiling, and an object of mass m is attached to the free end. The object is pulled down, thereby stretching the spring, and then released. The object oscillates up and down, and the time T required for one complete up and down oscillation is given by the equation T= 2pi square root of m/k, where k is known as the spring constant. What must be the dimension of k for this equation to be dimensionally correct?
A spring is haning down from the ceiling, and an object of mass m is attached to the free end. The object is pulled down, thereby stretching the spring, and then released. The object oscillates up and down, and the time T required for one complete up and down oscillation is given by the equation T= 2pi square root of m/k, where k is known as the spring constant. What must be the dimension of k for this equation to be dimensionally correct?