justdoitdt Posted April 22, 2020 Posted April 22, 2020 I'm looking at the AP Mech C practice FRQ: https://apclassroom.collegeboard.org/29/question_bank/create/preview/item/1320757 On part c, the scoring rubric says "1 point is earned for [graphing] a pair of quantities that could be used to determine g - students must graph measured, not calculated quantities." Does this mean that graphing k∆x vs. Msinθ would not earn the point? If so, that would deviate from past AP Exams, would it not? Quote
justdoitdt Posted April 23, 2020 Author Posted April 23, 2020 A very interesting question, OP. Color me flummoxed. Quote
FizziksGuy Posted April 23, 2020 Posted April 23, 2020 Graphing the empirical k_delta_x vs. Msintheta would work, but not the theoretical. They want you to determine an empirical value for g, not do a mathematical exercise that results in a 1=1 proof. Quote
justdoitdt Posted April 27, 2020 Author Posted April 27, 2020 Graphing k∆x vs. Msinθ would result in a slope of g. Not a slope of 1. But since k must have been calculated, the wording of the rubric makes it sound like this solution wouldn't count. Quote
FizziksGuy Posted April 27, 2020 Posted April 27, 2020 Right, but it's ultimately a proof of 1 vs. 1, not an empirical derivation of g. You're proving something is itself if you use theoretical values. Quote
justdoitdt Posted April 27, 2020 Author Posted April 27, 2020 I'm not following you, Fizziks. None of the graphed values (k∆x vs. Msinθ) are theoretical. k - must be calculated somehow, based on measurements of force, displacement, and/or the like ∆x - measured M - measured θ - measured sinθ - calculated What theoretical values are you referring to? Quote
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