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The magnitude is 738 kJ/mol.
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The measure of energy released by an earthquake depends on its magnitude. If its a high magnitude earthquake, there is a lot of energy. If there is a low magnitude, then there is little energy.
Seismic energy increases by a factor of about 31.6 for each increase of magnitude, so a magnitude 3 earthquake has 31.6 times more energy released than a magnitude 2 earthquake.
Every change of 1 on the Richter scale increases the amplitude of the measured seismic waves of the earthquake by a factor of 10 and the energy released scales with the shaking amplitude based on the following: Change in energy released = (10^Md)^(3/2) Where Md = difference in magnitude between two earthquakes (in the example above this is 3.0) Therefore a magnitude 6.0 earthquake releases (10^3.0)^(3/2) = 31,622 times more nergy than a magnitude 3.0 earthquake and has seismic waves with 1000 times larger amplitude.
The magnitude is 738 kJ/mol.
The smallest magnitude that could be felt by humans is at least a 5.5
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Linemen
The measure of energy released by an earthquake depends on its magnitude. If its a high magnitude earthquake, there is a lot of energy. If there is a low magnitude, then there is little energy.
An earthquake with a magnitude of 5.0 has a shaking amplitude 10 times that of an earthquake with a 4.0 magnitude.
water
A magnitude 6 earthquake has 10 ten times the energy of a magnitude 5 earthquake.
Yes, force can change the magnitude of a body.
You might mean Magnitude magnitude is the measure of energy released in an earthquake. it doesnt change per area like intensity, an earthquake has one magnitude. It may be expressed using several magnitude scales. It is very unlikely that an earthquake of magnitude less than 5 could cause any damage.
Mass n acc Answer2: Force is F = XE = [d/dr, Del] [Epotential, Evector], the spatial rate of change of energy. If the change of energy is high, the magnitude of force is high. Force is not always related to mass or acceleration, for example with electromagnetic force.
The magnitude of an earthquake is a measure of the energy that is released by the event.