<p>Same bae ^.</p>
<p>@hoboeperson I don’t know. Bring it and a TI84 just in case? If you have a TI84.</p>
<p>Same bae ^.</p>
<p>@hoboeperson I don’t know. Bring it and a TI84 just in case? If you have a TI84.</p>
<p>Good Luck everyone! I’m saving my answers :-S </p>
<p>my school starts the test at 12:15 not 1:15 </p>
<p>Same. If your school wishes you can start an hour earlier or something.</p>
<p>Anyway… does anybody know any “easy” questions that will be easy points? I’m so worried about this and I just need to know. Like questions that show up frequently that can be answered fast. </p>
<p>Taking this next year good luck guys :)</p>
<p>Here’s my multiple choice answers (it was harder than I expected so I know they all aren’t right)</p>
<p>112314432
232223143
414241423
21244311
3243
4224
4234
211</p>
<p>Almost confident I got a 100, took the sat2 in physics and this was a breeze .</p>
<p>MC:
Part A
11231342211222314241424142321234311
Part B
324312134314211</p>
<p>Extended Response
10N=1cm
(Drawn arrow that’s 10cm)
100N
36.86 degrees
5n/m
7.38kgm/s
98 watts
3 curved lines
Up arrow for the transverse wave
Lost to heat
15m/s
2.5m/s^2
Displacement
Drawn series circuit
240 ohm
140 ohm
.025 watts
3.5x10^18N</p>
<p>Okay, I felt a little iffy on some multiple choice, but here are my answers:
11231342213222314241424142321234311323314134314221</p>
<p>Do you guys know what the rounding policy is? Like if I put 37 degrees instead of 36.8?</p>
<p>That should be fine, they always do sig figs but my teacher said anything around it is acceptable </p>
<p>@hoboeperson it was 24 ohms, 14 ohms, and 2.5 watts. The current was 0.50 amps, I think you used 0.05 amps.</p>
<p>I didn’t save my answers, but does anyone remember what they put for the order of magnitude of a 30 story building? </p>
<p>10^2</p>
<p>What will be considered acceptable answers for the last question (what is conserved)? </p>
<p>Momentum?
Matter? </p>
<p>Yeah I agree with you @DAIMYO</p>
<p>@aberlasters from the past Regents, I’ve seen it to be + or - 2 degrees. You never know though, they might make it + or - 0.2 degrees this time.</p>
<p>I put Momentum and Energy @jamesjunkers</p>
<p>It’s always +/- 2 degrees for angles, and +/-.2cm for measurements </p>
<p>I also put momentum and energy.</p>
<p>What did you guys put for the question about the 2 flint stones being hit together and the energies formed by that spark?</p>