<p>Can someone else that thinks they got a 100 on Multiple choice post theirs… Because there were a lot of different answers from previous peoples posts </p>
<p>If someone wants to be an awesome person an make an excel doc with everyone’s answers (so we can see which are agreed and which are not), that’d be awesome (for people who posted Mc answers) </p>
<p>not sure if these are correct but here are my MC answers:</p>
<p>part A
112343433132
223142414241
42321234311</p>
<p>part b
32331
21343
14223</p>
<p>What was the last multiple choice question? </p>
<p>My MC answers
1123 1342 2132 2231 4241 4241 4232 1234 311
3233 1213 4314 221</p>
<p>If anyone knows how to crack passwords, the password is 128bit and the user password hash (encrypted) is 975339cb2e8e833c40660d86c5451433ff000000ff000000ff000000ff000000
I’m trying to brute force it. I’ll let the program run for a while. </p>
<p>James… Idk how to do that </p>
<p>@jamesjunkers i don’t remember. i feel like it’s the one with the linear graph and answer as “the same” but i don’t know. i actually really hope it’s not that one because then that means i bubbled wrong lol -.-</p>
<p>I feel pretty good about mine now (I took Physics B this year).
Part A:
1123 134[2] 213[2] 2231 4341 4241 4232 1234 311
Part B-1:
3233 1213 4314 221</p>
<p>Part B-2:
10N = 1cm
Draw the resultant
100N
36 degrees
5 N/m
7.38 m/s
98 Watts
3 curved lines
Arrow pointing up
Internal resistance depletes some energy?
15 m/s
2.5 m/s^2
Displacement</p>
<p>Part C
[drawing of the circuit]
24 ohms
14 ohms
14.4 Watts
3.52 x 10^8 N
2.27 x 10^-3 m/s^2
20N
49.05N
0.41 = coefficient of kinetic friction
2.85 x 10^-18J
6.63 x 10^-18J
3.45 x 10^-18J
Momentum and energy</p>
<p>Numbers with brackets around them are ones I was stuck on - the first was the elevator one (but now I’m assured it was less than 750, which I put), second was the moving electron one (I put both an electric and a magnetic field).</p>
<p>1123 1342 2132 2231 4241 4241 4232 1234 311
3233 1213 4314 222</p>
<p>I’m pretty sure I only got #50 wrong (I read the question wrong).</p>
<p>For the question about the flint stones what was the answer? I put internal and nuclear but I have a feeling that’s wrong. Did anyone else put that? </p>
<p>Here’s a spread sheet
<a href=“Physics 2014 REGENTS - Google Sheets”>Physics 2014 REGENTS - Google Sheets;
<p>@krauser126 Nuclear energy is only released during nuclear fission, fusion, and decay I’m pretty sure… plus, the nucleuses of the molecules in the flint stones are unaffected when rubbed together.</p>
<p>@DAIMYO but the answer said electromagnetic, not electrostatic…</p>
<p>Yeah but I think they were just trying to throw you off. Electric energy still falls under electromagnetic energy, I’m pretty sure, and a spark was produced soo</p>
<p>Wait, for the transverse wave one, I drew two arrows, one up and down (instructions probably would’ve helped). Any chance of getting the point still, do you think?</p>
<p>What is you put distance instead of displacement? </p>
<p>Distance should still be accepted.</p>
<p>@DAIMYO could you post all your answers please?</p>
<p>I posted all my MC on the last page, and I posted part 2 explanations on the spreadsheet.</p>
<p>Wait the MC question about the light traveling from water to air, what’d you all get? I think I put choice two.</p>