The surface energy of a droplet is given by:
\[ E = \sigma \times A, \]where \( \sigma \) is the surface tension and \( A \) is the surface area.
Let the radius of each small drop be \( r \). The surface area of one small drop is:
\[ A_1 = 4 \pi r^2. \]For 1000 small drops, the total surface area is:
\[ A_1(\text{total}) = 1000 \times 4 \pi r^2 = 4000 \pi r^2. \]The total surface energy of the small drops is:
\[ E_1 = \sigma \times A_1(\text{total}) = \sigma \times 4000 \pi r^2. \]When the 1000 small drops coalesce, the total volume remains the same. The volume of one small drop is:
\[ V_{\text{small}} = \frac{4}{3} \pi r^3. \]The total volume of 1000 small drops is:
\[ V_{\text{total}} = 1000 \times \frac{4}{3} \pi r^3 = \frac{4}{3} \pi (1000 r^3). \]If the radius of the large drop is \( R \), the volume of the large drop is:
\[ V_{\text{large}} = \frac{4}{3} \pi R^3. \]Equating the volumes:
\[ \frac{4}{3} \pi R^3 = \frac{4}{3} \pi (1000 r^3), \]which simplifies to:
\[ R^3 = 1000 r^3 \Rightarrow R = 10r. \]The surface area of the large drop is:
\[ A_2 = 4 \pi R^2 = 4 \pi (10r)^2 = 4 \pi \times 100r^2 = 400 \pi r^2. \]The surface energy of the large drop is:
\[ E_2 = \sigma \times A_2 = \sigma \times 400 \pi r^2. \]The ratio of surface energies is:
\[ \frac{E_1}{E_2} = \frac{\sigma \times 4000 \pi r^2}{\sigma \times 400 \pi r^2}. \]Simplifying:
\[ \frac{E_1}{E_2} = \frac{4000}{400} = 10. \]Final Answer: The ratio of surface energies is: 10.
A body of mass 1000 kg is moving horizontally with a velocity of 6 m/s. If 200 kg extra mass is added, the final velocity (in m/s) is: