You are designing a slide for a water park. In a sitting position, park guests slide a vertical distance h down the water-slide, which has negligible friction. When they reach the bottom of the slide, they grab a handle at the bottom end of a 6.00-m-long uniform pole. The pole hangs vertically, initially at rest. The upper end of the pole is pivoted about a stationary, frictionless axle. The pole with a person hanging on the end swings up through an angle of 72.0°, and then the person lets go of the pole and drops into a pool of water. Treat the person as a point mass. The pole’s moment of inertia is given by I = 1 3 M L 2 , where L = 6.00 m is the length of the pole and M = 24.0 kg is its mass. For a person of mass 70.0 kg. what must be the height h in order for the pole to have a maximum angle of swing of 72.0° after the collision?
You are designing a slide for a water park. In a sitting position, park guests slide a vertical distance h down the water-slide, which has negligible friction. When they reach the bottom of the slide, they grab a handle at the bottom end of a 6.00-m-long uniform pole. The pole hangs vertically, initially at rest. The upper end of the pole is pivoted about a stationary, frictionless axle. The pole with a person hanging on the end swings up through an angle of 72.0°, and then the person lets go of the pole and drops into a pool of water. Treat the person as a point mass. The pole’s moment of inertia is given by I = 1 3 M L 2 , where L = 6.00 m is the length of the pole and M = 24.0 kg is its mass. For a person of mass 70.0 kg. what must be the height h in order for the pole to have a maximum angle of swing of 72.0° after the collision?
You are designing a slide for a water park. In a sitting position, park guests slide a vertical distance h down the water-slide, which has negligible friction. When they reach the bottom of the slide, they grab a handle at the bottom end of a 6.00-m-long uniform pole. The pole hangs vertically, initially at rest. The upper end of the pole is pivoted about a stationary, frictionless axle. The pole with a person hanging on the end swings up through an angle of 72.0°, and then the person lets go of the pole and drops into a pool of water. Treat the person as a point mass. The pole’s moment of inertia is given by
I
=
1
3
M
L
2
, where L = 6.00 m is the length of the pole and M = 24.0 kg is its mass. For a person of mass 70.0 kg. what must be the height h in order for the pole to have a maximum angle of swing of 72.0° after the collision?
You're on an interplanetary mission, in an orbit around the Sun. Suppose you make a maneuver that brings your perihelion in closer to the Sun but leaves your aphelion unchanged. Then you must have
Question 2 options:
sped up at perihelion
sped up at aphelion
slowed down at perihelion
slowed down at aphelion
The force of the quadriceps (Fq) and force of the patellar tendon (Fp) is identical (i.e., 1000 N each). In the figure below angle in blue is Θ and the in green is half Θ (i.e., Θ/2). A) Calculate the patellar reaction force (i.e., R resultant vector is the sum of the horizontal component of the quadriceps and patellar tendon force) at the following joint angles: you need to provide a diagram showing the vector and its components for each part. a1) Θ = 160 degrees, a2) Θ = 90 degrees. NOTE: USE ONLY TRIGNOMETRIC FUNCTIONS (SIN/TAN/COS, NO LAW OF COSINES, NO COMPLICATED ALGEBRAIC EQUATIONS OR ANYTHING ELSE, ETC. Question A has 2 parts!
The force of the quadriceps (Fq) and force of the patellar tendon (Fp) is identical (i.e., 1000 N each). In the figure below angle in blue is Θ and the in green is half Θ (i.e., Θ/2). A) Calculate the patellar reaction force (i.e., R resultant vector is the sum of the horizontal component of the quadriceps and patellar tendon force) at the following joint angles: you need to provide a diagram showing the vector and its components for each part. a1) Θ = 160 degrees, a2) Θ = 90 degrees. NOTE: USE DO NOT USE LAW OF COSINES, NO COMPLICATED ALGEBRAIC EQUATIONS OR ANYTHING ELSE, ETC. Question A has 2 parts!
Chapter 10 Solutions
University Physics with Modern Physics, Volume 1 (Chs. 1-20) and Mastering Physics with Pearson eText & ValuePack Access Card (14th Edition)
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