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a 100 kg gymnast comes to a stop after tumbling. her feet do -5000J of net work to stop her. Use the work-kinetic energy theorem to find the girl's initial velocity when she began to stop?

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2 votes
W=ΔKE , W=-5000j
KEinitial=(1/2)mv² , KEfinal=0j
ΔKE=-(1/2)mv²
-5000=-(1/2)(100kg)v²
v=10 m/s

User Wannabe
by
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5 votes

Answer:

10 m/s

Step-by-step explanation:

The work-kinetic energy theorem states that the net work done on an object is equal to the change in the kinetic energy of the object.

In formula:


W=K_f -K_i (1)

where

W is the work done

Ki is the initial kinetic energy

Kf is the final kinetic energy

In this problem, we have:


W=-5000 J the net work done on the gymnast


m=100 kg is the mass of the gymnast


v_f = 0 is the final velocity of the gymnast, so her final kinetic energy is also zero:


K_f = (1)/(2)mv_f^2 = 0

Therefore, we can rewrite eq.(1) as


W=-(1)/(2)mv_i^2

where
v_i is the initial velocity of the girl. By substituting the numbers and re-arranging the equation, we find:


v_i = \sqrt{-(2W)/(m)}=\sqrt{-(2(-5000 J))/(100 kg)}=10 m/s

User Nahid Bin Azhar
by
8.6k points