210k views
2 votes
Can you please help me with these five physics word problems? Thank you very much.

Can you please help me with these five physics word problems? Thank you very much-example-1
Can you please help me with these five physics word problems? Thank you very much-example-1
Can you please help me with these five physics word problems? Thank you very much-example-2
Can you please help me with these five physics word problems? Thank you very much-example-3
Can you please help me with these five physics word problems? Thank you very much-example-4
Can you please help me with these five physics word problems? Thank you very much-example-5

1 Answer

3 votes

1. Let

v₀ = initial velocity of the car

a = 2.3 m/s², its acceleration

x = 22.7 m, the distance covered by the car in 1.3 s

Since acceleration is constant, the distance covered after this time is

x = v₀t + 1/2 at ²

Solve for v₀ :

x = v₀t + 1/2 at ²

v₀t = x - 1/2 at ²

v₀ = x/t - 1/2 at

Plug in everything you know:

v₀ = (22.7 m)/(1.3 s) - 1/2 (2.3 m/s²) (1.3 s) ≈ 16 m/s

2. Recall that under constant acceleration,

v ² - v₀² = 2ax

where v is the velocity after some unknown time. This time,

v₀ = 0 because the is stopped at the light

a = 3.7 m/s²

x = 47.0 m

Solve for v :

v ² - v₀² = 2ax

v ² = v₀² + 2ax

v = √(v₀² + 2ax)

Plug in everything you know:

v = √(0² + 2 (3.7 m/s²) (47.0 m)) ≈ 19 m/s

3. Use the same equation as in the previous problem, but this time you solve for a.

v ² - v₀² = 2ax

a = (v ² - v₀²)/(2x)

We're given

v₀ = 23 m/s

v = 0, because the boy wants to stop his bike

x = 80 m

Then

a = (0² - (23 m/s)²)/(2 (80 m)) ≈ -3.3 m/s²

That is, the brakes have to apply a force that decelerates the bike with magnitude 3.3 m/s².

4. Same formula for acceleration as before,

a = (v ² - v₀²)/(2x)

with

v = 17.3 m/s

v₀ = 0

x = 48.4 m

We end up with

a = ((17.3 m/s)² - 0²)/(2 (48.4 m)) ≈ 3.09 m/s²

5. By definition of average acceleration,

a (ave) = ∆v/∆t

That is, average acceleration is the ratio of change in velocity to change in time. Here we have

• ∆v = 0 - 38.0 m/s = -38.0 m/s, the difference between the final and initial velocities

• ∆t = 3.9 s, the time it takes to stop

Then

a (ave) = (-38.0 m/s)/(3.9 s) ≈ -9.7 m/s²

User Gillardo
by
4.9k points