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A father and his young son get on a teeter-totter. The son sits 2 m fromthe center, but the father has to sit closer to balance. Where does the father have to sit to balance the teeter-totter if he weighs 4 times as much as his son?

User ISWORD
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1 Answer

5 votes

Answer:

The distance of the father from the center is
d_f = (1)/(2) \ m

Step-by-step explanation:

From the question we are told that

The distance of the son from the center is
d_s = 2 \ m

Let the mass of the son be
m_s

then the mass of the father is
m_f = 4m_s

Now for the teeter-totter to be balanced the torque due to the weight of the father must be equal to the torque due to the weight the son, this is mathematically represented as


\tau_s = \tau_f

Where
\tau_s is the torque of the son which is mathematically represented as


\tau_ s = m_s * d_s * g

while
\tau_f is the torque of the father which is mathematically represented as


\tau_f = m_f * d_f * g

=>
\tau_f = 4 m_s * d_f * g

So


4 m_s * d_f * g = m_s * d_s * g

substituting values


4 * d_f * = 2

=>
d_f = (1)/(2) \ m

User Ivan Li
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6.1k points