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A 60-kg robot walks at 1 m/s. What is the robot's kinetic energy?

User J Avery
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1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:


\boxed {\boxed {\sf 30 \ Joules}}

Explanation:

Kinetic energy can be found using the following formula:


KE=(1)/(2)mv^2

Where m is the mass and v is the velocity.

The robot has a mass of 60 kilograms and a velocity of 1 meter per second.


m= 60 \ kg \\v= 1 \ m/s

Substitute the values into the formula.


KE=(1)/(2) (60 \ kg) (1 \ m/s)^2

Solve the exponent first.

  • (1 m/s)²= 1 m/s * 1 m/s = 1 m²/s²


KE= (1)/(2) ( 60 \ kg )(1 m^2/s^2)

Multiply the numbers in parentheses.


KE=(1)/(2) ( 60 \ kg*m^2/s^2)

Multiply by 1/2 or divide by 2.


KE= 30 \ kg*m^2/s^2

  • 1 kg*m²/s² is equal to 1 J
  • Our answer: 30 kg*m²/s² is equal to 30 Joules


KE= 30 \ J

The robot's kinetic energy is 30 Joules

User Pymd
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3.1k points