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3 June, 04:45

For the same signal emitted by a radio antenna,

Observer A measures its intensity to be 16 times the

intensity measured by Observer B. The distance of

Observer A from the radio antenna is what fraction

of the distance of Observer B from the radio

antenna?

+4
Answers (1)
  1. 3 June, 05:08
    0
    Answer: The distance of Observer A from the radio antenna is what fraction of the distance of Observer B from the radio antenna?

    It is 1/4.

    Step-by-step explanation:

    We know that the intensity of electromagnetic waves decreases with the radius squared, this means that we can write a simple relation as:

    Intensity (r) = A/r^2

    Observer A measures 16 the intensity of observer B.

    if Ia is the intensity that observer A measures and Ib is the intensity that observer B measures, we have that:

    Ia = 16Ib

    A / (ra) ^2 = 16*A / (rb) ^2

    1 / (ra) ^2 = 16 / (rb) ^2

    rb^2 = 16*ra^2

    and we know that 16 = 4*4 = 4^2

    rb^2 = (4*ra) ^2

    then rb = 4*ra

    this means that the distance between observer B and the antenna is equal to 4 times the distance between observer A and the antenna.

    The fraction is ra = rb/4

    The distance of

    Observer A from the radio antenna is what fraction of the distance of Observer B from the radio antenna?

    It is 1/4.
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