181k views
3 votes
A car is traveling at 10 m/s starts to decelerate steadily. It comes to a complete stop in 20 seconds what is it’s acceleration

User Royeet
by
5.4k points

2 Answers

5 votes

Hello!

A car traveling at 10 m/s starts to decelerate steadily. It comes to a complete stop in 20 seconds. What is it's acceleration ?

We have the following data:

Vi (initial velocity) = 10 m/s (starts)

Vf (final velocity) = 0 m/s (stop)

t (time) = 20 s

a (acceleration) = ? (in m/s²)

We apply the data to the formula of the hourly function of the velocity, let us see:


V_f = V_i + a*t


0 = 10 + a*20


- 10 = 20\:a


20\:a = - 10


a = (-1\diagup\!\!\!\!0)/(2\diagup\!\!\!\!0)


\boxed{\boxed{a = - 0.5\:m/s^2}}\Longrightarrow(the\:car\:slows\:down)\:\:\:\:\:\:\bf\green{\checkmark}

Answer:

The acceleration is -0.5 m/s² (decelerate)

________________________________


\bf\red{I\:Hope\:this\:helps,\:greetings ...\:Dexteright02!}

User Zubair Ahmed
by
4.7k points
3 votes

Answer:

-0.5 m/s

Step-by-step explanation:

given:

u (initial velocity) = 10 m/s

v (Final velocity) = 0 m/s (because it is given that it comes to a complete stop)

t (time taken) = 20 s

therefore,

acceleration = v - u / t

a = 0 - 10 / 20

a = -10 / 20

a = -1/2

a = -0.5

There is a acceleration of -0.5 m/s

User Mark Hobson
by
5.0k points