College Physics: A Strategic Approach (3rd Edition)
3rd Edition
ISBN: 9780321879721
Author: Randall D. Knight (Professor Emeritus), Brian Jones, Stuart Field
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 10, Problem 26MCQ
A hockey puck sliding along frictionless ice with speed v to the right collides with a horizontal spring and compresses it by 2.0 cm before coming to a momentary stop. What will be the spring's maximum compression if the same puck hits it at a speed of 2v?
A. 2.0 cm
B. 2.8 cm
C. 4.0 cm
D. 5.6 cm
E. 8.0 cm
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
A hockey puck sliding along frictionless ice with speed ν to the right collides with a horizontal spring and compresses it by 2.0 cm before coming to a momentary stop. What will be the spring’s maximum compression if the same puck hits it at a speed of 2ν?A. 2.0 cm B. 2.8 cm C. 4.0 cmD. 5.6 cm E. 8.0 cm
8. A model car of mass 4.5 kg slides down a frictionless ramp into a spring constant k=4.85kN/m.
a. The spring experiences a maximum compression of 21 cm. Determine the height of the initial
release point.
b. Calculate the speed of the model car when the spring has been compressed 12 cm.
hc.
Determine the maximum acceleration of the car after it hits the spring.
A 1.5 kg block sliding along a frictionless horizontal surface at 2.9 m/s collides with and compresses a spring
attached to a wall with spring constant k = 390 N/m. What distance is the spring compressed from its equilibrium
position?
A. 3.2 cm
B. 18 cm
C. 11 m
D. 7.3 m
Chapter 10 Solutions
College Physics: A Strategic Approach (3rd Edition)
Ch. 10 - The brake shoes of your car are made of a material...Ch. 10 - When you pound a nail with a hammer, the nail gets...Ch. 10 - For Questions 3 through 1 0, give a specific...Ch. 10 - For Questions 3 through 1 0, give a specific...Ch. 10 - For Questions 3 through 10, give a specific...Ch. 10 - For Questions 3 through 10, give a specific...Ch. 10 - For Questions 3 through 1 0, give a specific...Ch. 10 - For Questions 3 through 1 0, give a specific...Ch. 10 - For Questions 3 through 1 0, give a specific...Ch. 10 - For Questions 3 through 1 0, give a specific...
Ch. 10 - A ball of putty is dropped from a height of 2 m...Ch. 10 - A 0.5 kg mass on a 1-m-long string swings in a...Ch. 10 - Particle A has less mass than particle B. Both are...Ch. 10 - Puck B has twice the mass of puck A. Starting from...Ch. 10 - To change a tire, you need to use a jack to raise...Ch. 10 - Prob. 16CQCh. 10 - A roller coaster car rolls down a frictionless...Ch. 10 - A spring gun shoots out a plastic ball at speed v....Ch. 10 - Sandy and Chris stand on the edge of a cliff and...Ch. 10 - A solid cylinder and a hollow cylinder have the...Ch. 10 - You are much more likely to be injured if you fall...Ch. 10 - A roller coaster starts from rest at its highest...Ch. 10 - You and a friend each carry a 15 kg suitcase up...Ch. 10 - A woman uses a pulley and a rope to raise a 20 kg...Ch. 10 - A hockey puck sliding along frictionless ice with...Ch. 10 - A block slides down a smooth ramp, starting from...Ch. 10 - A wrecking ball is suspended from a 5.0-m-long...Ch. 10 - Prob. 1PCh. 10 - The two ropes seen in Figure P10.2 are used to...Ch. 10 - The two ropes shown in the bird's-eye view of...Ch. 10 - Prob. 4PCh. 10 - A boy flies a kite with the string at a 30 angle...Ch. 10 - A crate slides down a ramp that makes a 20 angle...Ch. 10 - Which has the larger kinetic energy, a 10 g bullet...Ch. 10 - At what speed does a 1000 kg compact car have the...Ch. 10 - Prob. 9PCh. 10 - The cheetah is the fastest land animal, reaching...Ch. 10 - How fast would an 80 kg man need to run in order...Ch. 10 - Sams job at the amusement park is to slow down and...Ch. 10 - A 20 g plastic ball is moving to the left at 30...Ch. 10 - Prob. 14PCh. 10 - An energy storage system based on a flywheel (a...Ch. 10 - The lowest point in death Valley is 85.0 m below...Ch. 10 - Prob. 17PCh. 10 - The world's fastest humans can reach speeds of...Ch. 10 - A 72 kg bike racer climbs a 1200-m-long section of...Ch. 10 - A 1000 kg wrecking ball hangs from a 15-m-long...Ch. 10 - How far must you stretch a spring with k = 1000...Ch. 10 - How much energy can be stored in a spring with a...Ch. 10 - The elastic energy stored in your tendons can...Ch. 10 - Marissa drags a 23 kg duffel bag 14 m across the...Ch. 10 - Mark pushes his broken car 150 m down the block to...Ch. 10 - A 900 N crate slides 12m down a ramp that makes an...Ch. 10 - A 25 kg child slides down a playground slide at a...Ch. 10 - A boy reaches out of a window and tosses a ball...Ch. 10 - Prob. 29PCh. 10 - What minimum speed does a 100 g puck need to make...Ch. 10 - A car is parked at the top of a 50-m-high hill....Ch. 10 - A 1500 kg car is approaching the hill shown in...Ch. 10 - A 10 kg runaway grocery cart runs into a spring,...Ch. 10 - As a 15,000 kg jet lands on an aircraft carrier,...Ch. 10 - Your friend's Frisbee has become stuck 16m above...Ch. 10 - A fireman of mass 80 kg slides down a pole. When...Ch. 10 - Prob. 37PCh. 10 - Prob. 38PCh. 10 - In the winter activity of tubing, riders slide...Ch. 10 - A cyclist is coasting at 12 m/s when she starts...Ch. 10 - A 50 g marble moving at 2.0 m/s strikes a 20 g...Ch. 10 - Ball 1, with a mass of 100 g and traveling at 10...Ch. 10 - Prob. 43PCh. 10 - Two balls undergo a perfectly elastic head-on...Ch. 10 - Prob. 45PCh. 10 - Prob. 46PCh. 10 - A 1000 kg sports car accelerates from 0 to 30m/sin...Ch. 10 - In just 0.30 s, you compress a spring (spring...Ch. 10 - An elite Tour de France cyclist can maintain an...Ch. 10 - A 710 kg car drives at a constant speed of 23 m/s....Ch. 10 - An elevator weighing 2500 N ascends at a constant...Ch. 10 - How much work does Scott do to push a 80 kg sofa...Ch. 10 - A 550 kg elevator accelerates upward at 1.2 m/s2...Ch. 10 - Prob. 54GPCh. 10 - Prob. 55GPCh. 10 - Prob. 56GPCh. 10 - You are driving your 1500 kg car at 20 m/s down a...Ch. 10 - A 20 kg child is on a swing that hangs from...Ch. 10 - Prob. 59GPCh. 10 - A cannon tilted up at a 30 angle fires a cannon...Ch. 10 - The sledder shown in Figure P10.61 starts from the...Ch. 10 - A 50 g ice cube can slide without friction up and...Ch. 10 - The maximum energy a bone can absorb without...Ch. 10 - In an amusement park water slide, people slide...Ch. 10 - Boxes A and B in Figure P10.69 have masses of 12.0...Ch. 10 - What would be the speed of the boxes in Problem 69...Ch. 10 - A 20 g ball is fired horizontally with initial...Ch. 10 - Two coupled boxcars are rolling along at 2.5 m/s...Ch. 10 - A fish scale, consisting of a spring with spring...Ch. 10 - A 70 kg human sprinter can accelerate from rest to...Ch. 10 - A 50 g ball of clay traveling at 6.5 m/s hits and...Ch. 10 - Prob. 78GPCh. 10 - The mass of an elevator and its occupants is 1200...Ch. 10 - Prob. 80GPCh. 10 - Tennis Ball Testing A tennis ball bouncing on a...Ch. 10 - Tennis Ball Testing A tennis ball bouncing on a...Ch. 10 - Tennis Ball Testing A tennis ball bouncing on a...Ch. 10 - Prob. 84MSPPCh. 10 - Tennis Ball Testing A tennis ball bouncing on a...Ch. 10 - Work and Power in Cycling When you ride a bicycle...Ch. 10 - Work and Power in Cycling When you ride a bicycle...Ch. 10 - Work and Power in Cycling When you ride a bicycle...Ch. 10 - Work and Power in Cycling When you ride a bicycle...Ch. 10 - Work and Power in Cycling When you ride a bicycle...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
3. CAUTION Why is genetic drift aptly named?
a. It causes allele frequencies to drift up or down randomly.
b. I...
Biological Science (6th Edition)
Modified True/False 9. A giant bacterium that is large enough to be seen without a microscope is Selenomonas.
Microbiology with Diseases by Body System (5th Edition)
19. A car starts from rest at a stop sign. It accelerates at 4.0 m/s2 for 6.0 s, coasts for 2.0s, and then slow...
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: A Strategic Approach, Vol. 1 (Chs 1-21) (4th Edition)
4. How do gross anatomy and microscopic anatomy differ?
Human Anatomy & Physiology (2nd Edition)
Your bore cells, muscle cells, and skin cells look different because a. different kinds of genes are present in...
Campbell Essential Biology (7th Edition)
WHAT IF? What would the human life cycle be like if we had alternation of generations? Assume that the multice...
Campbell Biology (11th Edition)
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- Integrated Concepts A toy gun uses a spring with a force constant of 300 N/m to propel a 10.0-g steel ball. If the spring is compressed 7.00 cm and friction is negligible: (a) How much force is needed to compress the spring? (b) To what maximum height can the ball be shot? (c) At what angles above the horizontal may a child aim to hit a target 3.00 m away at the same height as the gun? (d) What is the gun's maximum range on level ground?arrow_forwardIn the short story The Pit and the Pendulum by 19th-century American horror writer Edgar Allen Poe, a man is tied to a table directly below a swinging pendulum that is slowly lowered toward him. The bob of the pendulum is a 1-ft steel scythe connected to a 30-ft brass rod. When the man first sees the pendulum, the pivot is roughly 1 ft above the scythe so that a 29-ft length of the brass rod oscillates above the pivot (Fig. P16.39A). The man escapes when the pivot is near the end of the brass rod (Fig. P16.39B). a. Model the pendulum as a particle of mass ms 5 2 kg attached to a rod of mass mr 5 160 kg. Find the pendulums center of mass and rotational inertia around an axis through its center of mass. (Check your answers by finding the center of mass and rotational inertia of just the brass rod.) b. What is the initial period of the pendulum? c. The man saves himself by smearing food on his ropes so that rats chew through them. He does so when he has no more than 12 cycles before the pendulum will make contact with him. How much time does it take the rats to chew through the ropes? FIGURE P16.39arrow_forwardA 1.50-kg box rests atop a massless vertical spring with k = 4250 N/m that has been compressed by 15.0 cm from its equilibrium position. The box is released and leaves the spring when it reaches its equilibrium position. What is the maximum height the box reaches above its original position?arrow_forward
- A 1.50-kg mass is attached to a spring with spring constant 33.0 N/m on a frictionless, horizontal table. The springmass system is stretched to 4.00 cm beyond the equilibrium position of the spring and is released from rest at t = 0. a. What is the maximum speed of the 1.50-kg mass? b. What is the maximum acceleration of the 1.50-kg mass? c. What are the position, velocity, and acceleration of the 1.50-kg mass as functions of time?arrow_forwardOne type of toy car contains a spring that is compressed as the wheels are rolled backward along a surface. The spring remains compressed until the wheels are freed and the car is allowed to roll forward. Jose learns that if he rolls the car backward for a greater distance (up to a certain point), the car will go faster when he releases it. The spring compresses 1.00 cm for every 10.0 cm the car is rolled backward. a. Assuming the spring constant is 150.0 N/m, what is the elastic potential energy stored in the spring when Jose rolls the car backward 20.0 cm? b. What is the elastic potential energy stored in the spring when he rolls the car backward 30.0 cm? c. Explain the correlation between the results for parts (a) and (b) and Joses observations of different speeds.arrow_forwardThe position of a particle attached to a vertical spring is given by y=(y0cost)j. The y axis points upward, y0 = 14.5 cm. and = 18.85 rad/s. Find the position of the particle at a. t = 0 and b. t = 9.0 s. Give your answers in centimeters.arrow_forward
- You are looking at a small, leafy tree. You do not notice any breeze, and most of the leaves on the tree are motionless. One leaf however, is fluttering hack and forth wildly. After a while, that leaf stops moving and you notice a different leaf moving much more than all the others. Explain what could cause the large motion of one particular leaf.arrow_forward(a) How much will a spring that has a force constant of 40.0 mm be stretched by an object with a mass of 0.500 kg when hung motionless from the spring? (b) Calculate the decrease in gravitational potential energy of the 0.500kg object when it descends this distance. (c) Part of this gravitational energy goes into the spring. Calculate the energy stored in the spring by this stretch, and compete it with the gravitational potential energy. Explain where the rest of the energy might go.arrow_forwardYou attach a block to the bottom end of a spring hanging vertically. You slowly let the block move down and find that it hangs at rest with the spring stretched by 15.0 cm. Next, you lilt the block back up to the initial position and release it from rest with the spring unstretched. What maximum distance does it move dawn? (a) 7.5 cm (b) 15.0 cm (c) 30.0 cm (d) 60.0 cm (e) The distance cannot be determined without knowing the mass and spring constant.arrow_forward
- When an 80.0-kg man stands on a pogo stick, the spring is compressed 0.120 m. (a) What is the force constant of the spring? (b) Will the spring be compressed more when he hops down the road?arrow_forwardYou attach a block to the bottom end of a spring hanging vertically. You slowly let the block move down and find that it hangs at rest with the spring stretched by 15.0 cm. Next, you lift the block back up to the initial position and release it from rest with the spring unstretched. What maximum distance does it move down? (a) 7.5 cm (b) 15.0 cm (c) 30.0 cm (d) 60.0 cm (e) The distance cannot be determined without knowing the mass and spring constant.arrow_forwardA horizontal spring attached to a wall has a force constant of 850 N/m. A block of mass 1.00 kg is attached to the spring and oscillates freely on a horizontal, frictionless surface as in Figure 5.22. The initial goal of this problem is to find the velocity at the equilibrium point after the block is released. (a) What objects constitute the system, and through what forces do they interact? (b) What are the two points of interest? (c) Find the energy stored in the spring when the mass is stretched 6.00 cm from equilibrium and again when the mass passes through equilibrium after being released from rest. (d) Write the conservation of energy equation for this situation and solve it for the speed of the mass as it passes equilibrium. Substitute to obtain a numerical value. (e) What is the speed at the halfway point? Why isnt it half the speed at equilibrium?arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- College PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781305952300Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningPrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage Learning
- University Physics Volume 1PhysicsISBN:9781938168277Author:William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff SannyPublisher:OpenStax - Rice UniversityPhysics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage LearningGlencoe Physics: Principles and Problems, Student...PhysicsISBN:9780078807213Author:Paul W. ZitzewitzPublisher:Glencoe/McGraw-Hill
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781285737027
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781305952300
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
University Physics Volume 1
Physics
ISBN:9781938168277
Author:William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff Sanny
Publisher:OpenStax - Rice University
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...
Physics
ISBN:9781133939146
Author:Katz, Debora M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Glencoe Physics: Principles and Problems, Student...
Physics
ISBN:9780078807213
Author:Paul W. Zitzewitz
Publisher:Glencoe/McGraw-Hill
SIMPLE HARMONIC MOTION (Physics Animation); Author: EarthPen;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XjkUcJkGd3Y;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY