Why is the following situation impossible? In a large city with an air-pollution problem, a bus has no combustion engine. It runs over its citywide route on energy drawn from a large, rapidly rotating flywheel under the floor of the bus. The flywheel is spun up to its maximum rotation rate of 3 000 rev/min by an electric motor at the bus terminal. Every time the bus speeds up, the flywheel slows down slightly. The bus is equipped with regenerative braking so that the flywheel can speed up when the bus slows down. The flywheel is a uniform solid cylinder with mass 1 200 kg and radius 0.500 m. The bus body does work against air resistance and rolling resistance at the average rate of 25.0 hp as it travels its route with an average speed of 35.0 km/h.
Why is the following situation impossible? In a large city with an air-pollution problem, a bus has no combustion engine. It runs over its citywide route on energy drawn from a large, rapidly rotating flywheel under the floor of the bus. The flywheel is spun up to its maximum rotation rate of 3 000 rev/min by an electric motor at the bus terminal. Every time the bus speeds up, the flywheel slows down slightly. The bus is equipped with regenerative braking so that the flywheel can speed up when the bus slows down. The flywheel is a uniform solid cylinder with mass 1 200 kg and radius 0.500 m. The bus body does work against air resistance and rolling resistance at the average rate of 25.0 hp as it travels its route with an average speed of 35.0 km/h.
Solution Summary: The author explains that the bus cannot travel on its route with the average speed because the distance is too small. The formula to calculate the work done by the flywheel is, W=12Iome
Why is the following situation impossible? In a large city with an air-pollution problem, a bus has no combustion engine. It runs over its citywide route on energy drawn from a large, rapidly rotating flywheel under the floor of the bus. The flywheel is spun up to its maximum rotation rate of 3 000 rev/min by an electric motor at the bus terminal. Every time the bus speeds up, the flywheel slows down slightly. The bus is equipped with regenerative braking so that the flywheel can speed up when the bus slows down. The flywheel is a uniform solid cylinder with mass 1 200 kg and radius 0.500 m. The bus body does work against air resistance and rolling resistance at the average rate of 25.0 hp as it travels its route with an average speed of 35.0 km/h.
A cart on wheels (assume frictionless) with a mass of 20 kg is pulled rightward with a 50N force. What is its acceleration?
Two-point charges of 5.00 µC and -3.00 µC are placed 0.250 m apart.a) What is the electric force on each charge? Include strength and direction and a sketch.b) What would be the magnitude of the force if both charges are positive? How about the direction?
c) What will happen to the electric force on each piece of charge if they are moved twice as far apart? (Give a numerical answer as well as an explanation.)
y[m]
The figure shows two snapshots of a single wave on a string. The wave is
traveling to the right in the +x direction. The solid line is a snapshot of the wave
at time t=0 s, while the dashed line is a snapshot of the wave at t=0.48s.
0
0.75
1.5
2.25
3
8
8
6
6
4
2
4
2
0
-2
-2
-4
-4
-6
-6
-8
-8
0
0.75
1.5
2.25
3
x[m]
Determine the period of the wave in units of seconds.
Enter your numerical answer below including at least 3 significant figures. Do
not enter a fraction, do not use scientific notation.
Chapter 10 Solutions
Bundle: Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology Update, 9th Loose-leaf Version + WebAssign Printed Access Card, Multi-Term
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