224k views
0 votes
The tomato is dropped. What is the velocity, v, of the tomato when it hits the ground? Assume 85.6 % of the work done in Part A is transferred to kinetic energy, E, by the time the tomato hits the ground.

User Bkjvbx
by
8.7k points

2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:


v = 4.1 √(h)

Step-by-step explanation:

Let the mass of tomato is m and the height from which it falls is h.

Let the tomato its the ground with velocity v.

The potential energy of the tomato at height h

U = m x g x h

The kinetic energy of tomato as it hits the ground

K = 1/2 mv^2

According to the question,

85.6 % of Potential energy = Kinetic energy


(85.6)/(100)* m* g* h = (1)/(2)* m* v^(2)


v = 4.1 √(h)

User Smoksnes
by
7.9k points
4 votes

Answer:

Ok, we know that you drop a tomato of mass M from a height h, because you drop it, it has not initial velocity.

Now, the kinetic energy is:

K = (M/2)*v^2

because at the begginig there is not velocity, the kinetic energy is zero.

the potential energy is:

U = M*g*h

where g = 9.8m/s^2

We know that when the tomato hits the ground, the 85.6% of these potential energy is converted in kinetic; so we have:

K = 0.856*M*g*h = (1/2)*M*v^2

M can be canceled in both sides:

v^2 = 2*0.856*g*h

v = √(1.712*g*h)

is the velocity of the tomato when it hits the ground.

User Jarek
by
8.0k points

No related questions found

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