Science, asked by nicolleherrerazul200, 3 months ago

Now you will focus on a second hypothesis. This hypothesis can be very similar to the first, but this time you want to focus only on the second variable in question, speed. What could be a hypothesis that would illustrate the relationship between speed and kinetic energy? Use the format of "if…then…because…” when writing your hypothesis.

Answers

Answered by Munchies
26

Answer:

If the mass of an object increases, then its kinetic energy will increase proportionally because mass and kinetic energy have a linear relationship when graphed.

Explanation:

This is the sample answer btw.

Answered by hemakumar0116
4

Answer:

Sample Response: As an object's speed grows, so does its kinetic energy, since speed and kinetic energy have a linear connection when graphed.

Explanation:

Sample Response: As an object's speed grows, so does its kinetic energy, since speed and kinetic energy have a linear connection when graphed.

An object's kinetic energy is given by:

E=\dfrac{1}{2}mv^2

m is the object's mass.

v is the object's speed.

The above relationship shows that an object's kinetic energy is directly proportional to the product of mass and velocity.

The hypothesis may be:

Because kinetic energy is directly related to speed, increasing the object's speed increases its kinetic energy.

An object's kinetic energy is given by:

m is the object's mass.

v is the object's speed.

The above relationship shows that an object's kinetic energy is directly proportional to the product of mass and velocity.

The hypothesis may be:

Because kinetic energy is directly related to speed, increasing the object's speed increases its kinetic energy.

#SPJ2

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