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Assume that the stopping distance of van varies directly with the square of the speed. A Van travelling 40 miles per hour can stop in 80'. If Van travelling 64 miles per hour, What is it stopping distance?

User Abdoul
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1 Answer

5 votes
5 votes

We have a proportional relationship between the stopping distance d and the square of the speed v^2. This can be written as:


d=k\cdot v^2

where k is a constant we have to find.

We can calculate k knowing that, if the speed is v = 40 miles per hour, the distance is 80 feet. Then:


\begin{gathered} d=k\cdot v^2\longrightarrow k=(d)/(v^2) \\ k=(d)/(v^2)=(80)/(40^2)=(80)/(1600)=0.05 \end{gathered}

NOTE: This value of k correspond to the relation when d is expressed in feet and v in miles per hour.

Now, we can calculate the stopping distance for v = 64 miles per hour:


\begin{gathered} d=k\cdot v^2 \\ d=0.05\cdot64^2=0.05\cdot4096=204.8\text{ ft} \end{gathered}

Answer: 204.8 feet.

User Chutsu
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