186k views
17 votes
You get a job delivering water. You calculate how much work is done picking up each 20 L bottle of

water and raising it vertically 1 m. For every 100 bottles you deliver, you will use Select.... (g =
9.8 m/s2)
-196J
-2,000 J
-19,600 J
-196,000J

User Solidgumby
by
7.6k points

1 Answer

2 votes

Answer:

The work done by picking up 100 20-L bottles and raising it vertically 1 meter is 19614 joules.

Step-by-step explanation:

By the Work-Energy Theorem, the work needed to raise vertically 100 bottles of water is equal to the gravitational potential energy, units for work and energy are in joules:


\Delta W = \Delta U_(g) (1)

Where:


\Delta W - Work.


\Delta U_(g) - Gravitational potential energy.

The work is equal to the following formula:


\Delta W = n\cdot \rho \cdot V \cdot g \cdot \Delta h (2)

Where:


n - Number of bottles, dimensionless.


\rho - Density of water, measured in kilograms per cubic meter.


V - Volume, measured in cubic meters.


g - Gravitational acceleration, measured in meters per square second.


\Delta h - Vertical displacement, measured in meters.

If we know that
n = 100,
\rho = 1000\,(kg)/(m^(3)),
V = 0.02\,m^(3),
g = 9.807\,(m)/(s^(2)) and
\Delta h = 1\,m, then the work done is:


\Delta W = (100)\cdot \left(1000\,(kg)/(m^(3)) \right)\cdot (0.02\,m^(3))\cdot \left(9.807\,(m)/(s^(2)) \right)\cdot (1\,m)


\Delta W = 19614\,J

The work done by picking up 100 20-L bottles and raising it vertically 1 meter is 19614 joules.

User John Xiao
by
8.2k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.