
University Physics (14th Edition)
14th Edition
ISBN: 9780133969290
Author: Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Question
Chapter 11, Problem 11.87P
(a)
To determine
To draw: The free body diagram of the bar.
(b)
To determine
To solve: The equation for
(c)
To determine
To plot: The graph
(d)
To determine
The y
-intercept of the straight line that fits the data.
Expert Solution & Answer

Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solution
Students have asked these similar questions
Moon Knight, from both comics and the show of the same name, has crescent shaped daggers he throws at enemies. To throw a crescent dagger he applies a force of 0.918 N at an angle of 75.0° relative to the dagger’s center of mass at a point 0.0690 m away from the dagger’s center of mass. If the crescent dagger has a moment of inertia of 2.57⋅10^−5 kg⋅m^2 , what is the angular acceleration of a crescent dagger as it is thrown?
Because you are taking physics, your friend asks you to explain the detection of gravity waves that was made by LIGO in early 2016. (See the section that discusses LIGO.) To do this, you first explain about Einstein's notion of large masses, like those of stars, causing a curvature of
spacetime. (See the section on general relativity.) To demonstrate, you put a bowling ball on your bed, so that it sinks downward and creates a deep depression in the mattress. Your sheet has a checked pattern that provides a nice coordinate system, as shown in the figure below.
This is an example of a large mass (the bowling ball) creating a curvature of a flat, two-dimensional surface (the mattress) into a third dimension. (Spacetime is four dimensional, so its curvature is not easily visualized.) Then, you are going to amaze your friend by projecting a marble
horizontally along a section of the sheet surface that is curved downward by the bowling ball so that the marble follows a circular path, as…
An artificial satellite circling the Earth completes each orbit in 136 minutes.
(a) Find the altitude of the satellite.
m
(b) What is the value of g at the location of this satellite?
m/s²
Chapter 11 Solutions
University Physics (14th Edition)
Ch. 11 - Does a rigid object in uniform rotation about a...Ch. 11 - (a) Is it possible for an object to be in...Ch. 11 - Prob. Q11.3DQCh. 11 - Does the center of gravity of a solid body always...Ch. 11 - Prob. Q11.5DQCh. 11 - You are balancing a wrench by suspending it at a...Ch. 11 - You can probably stand flatfooted on the floor and...Ch. 11 - Prob. Q11.8DQCh. 11 - An object consists of a ball of weight W glued to...Ch. 11 - Prob. Q11.10DQ
Ch. 11 - Prob. Q11.11DQCh. 11 - In pioneer days, when a Conestoga wagon was stuck...Ch. 11 - The mighty Zimbo claims to have leg muscles so...Ch. 11 - Why is it easier to hold a 10-kg dumbbell in your...Ch. 11 - Certain features of a person, such as height and...Ch. 11 - During pregnancy, women often develop back pains...Ch. 11 - Why is a tapered water glass with a narrow base...Ch. 11 - Prob. Q11.18DQCh. 11 - A uniform beam is suspended horizontally and...Ch. 11 - If a metal wire has its length doubled and its...Ch. 11 - A metal wire of diameter D stretches by 0.100 mm...Ch. 11 - Prob. Q11.22DQCh. 11 - The material in human bones and elephant bones is...Ch. 11 - There is a small bui appreciable amount of elastic...Ch. 11 - When rubber mounting blocks are used to absorb...Ch. 11 - A 0.120-kg. 50.0-cm-long uniform bar has a small...Ch. 11 - Prob. 11.2ECh. 11 - A uniform rod is 2.00 m long and has mass 1.80 kg....Ch. 11 - A uniform 300-N trapdoor in a floor is hinged at...Ch. 11 - Raising a Ladder. A ladder carried by a fire truck...Ch. 11 - Two people are carrying a uniform wooden board...Ch. 11 - Two people carry a heavy electric motor by placing...Ch. 11 - A 60.0-cm. uniform. 50.0-N shelf is supported...Ch. 11 - A 350-N, uniform. 1.50-m bar is suspended...Ch. 11 - A uniform ladder 5.0 m long rests against a...Ch. 11 - A diving board 3.00 m long is supported at a point...Ch. 11 - A uniform aluminum beam 9.00 m long, weighing 300...Ch. 11 - Find the tension T in each cable and the magnitude...Ch. 11 - The horizontal beam in Fig. E11.14 weighs 190 N....Ch. 11 - The boom shown in Fig. E11.15 weighs 2600 N and is...Ch. 11 - Suppose that you can lift no more than 650 N...Ch. 11 - A 9.00-m-long uniform beam is hinged to a vertical...Ch. 11 - A 15,000-N crane pivots around a friction-free...Ch. 11 - A 3.00-m-long. 190-N, uniform rod at the zoo is...Ch. 11 - A nonuniform beam 4.50 m long and weighing 1.40 kN...Ch. 11 - A Couple. Two forces equal in magnitude and...Ch. 11 - BIO A Good Workout. You are doing exercises on a...Ch. 11 - BIO Neck Muscles. A student bends her head at 40.0...Ch. 11 - BIO Biceps Muscle. A relaxed biceps muscle...Ch. 11 - A circular steel wire 2.00 m long must stretch no...Ch. 11 - Two circular rods, one steel and the other copper,...Ch. 11 - A metal rod that is 4.00 m long and 0.50 cm2 in...Ch. 11 - Stress on a Mountaineers Rope. A nylon rope used...Ch. 11 - In constructing a large mobile, an artist hangs an...Ch. 11 - A vertical, solid steel post 25 cm in diameter and...Ch. 11 - BIO Compression of Human Bone. The bulk modulus...Ch. 11 - A solid gold bar is pulled up from the hold of the...Ch. 11 - A specimen of oil having an initial volume of 600...Ch. 11 - In the Challenger Deep of the Marianas Trench, the...Ch. 11 - A copper cube measures 6.00 cm on each side. The...Ch. 11 - A square steel plate is 10.0 cm on a side and...Ch. 11 - In lab tests on a 9.25-cm cube of a certain...Ch. 11 - A brass wire is to withstand a tensile force of...Ch. 11 - In a materials testing laboratory, a metal wire...Ch. 11 - A 4.0-m-long steel wire has a cross-sectional area...Ch. 11 - CP A steel cable with cross-sectional area 3.00...Ch. 11 - A door 1.00 m wide and 2.00 m high weighs 330 N...Ch. 11 - A box of negligible mass rests at the lett end of...Ch. 11 - Sir Lancelot rides slowly out of the castle at...Ch. 11 - Mountain Climbing. Mountaineers often use a rope...Ch. 11 - A uniform, 8.0-m, 1150-kg beam is hinged to a wall...Ch. 11 - A uniform, 255.N rod that is 2.00 m long carries a...Ch. 11 - A claw hammer is used to pull a nail out of a...Ch. 11 - You open a restaurant and hope to entice customers...Ch. 11 - End A of the bar AB in Fig. P11.50 rests on a...Ch. 11 - BIO Supporting a Broken Leg. A therapist tells a...Ch. 11 - A Truck on a Drawbridge. A loaded cement mixer...Ch. 11 - BIO Leg Raises. In a simplified version of the...Ch. 11 - BIO Pumping Iron. A 72.0-kg weightlifter doing arm...Ch. 11 - Prob. 11.55PCh. 11 - You are asked to design the decorative mobile...Ch. 11 - A uniform, 7.5-m-long beam weighing 6490 N is...Ch. 11 - CP A uniform drawbridge must be held at a 37 angle...Ch. 11 - BIO Tendon-Stretching Exercises. As part of an...Ch. 11 - (a) In Fig. P11.60 a 6.00-m-loog, uniform beam is...Ch. 11 - A uniform, horizontal flagpole 5.00 m long with a...Ch. 11 - A holiday decoration consists of two shiny glass...Ch. 11 - BIO Downward-Facing Dog. The yoga exercise...Ch. 11 - A uniform metal bar that is 8.00 m long and has...Ch. 11 - A worker wants to turn over a uniform. 1250-N,...Ch. 11 - One end of a uniform meter stick is placed against...Ch. 11 - Two friends are carrying a 200-kg crate up a...Ch. 11 - BIO Forearm. In the human arm, the forearm and...Ch. 11 - BIO CALC Refer to the discussion of holding a...Ch. 11 - In a city park a nonuniform wooden beam 4.00 m...Ch. 11 - You are a summer intern for an architectural firm....Ch. 11 - You are trying to raise a bicycle wheel of mass m...Ch. 11 - The Farmyard Gate. A gate 4.00 m wide and 2.00 m...Ch. 11 - If you put a uniform block at the edge of a table,...Ch. 11 - Two uniform, 75.0-g marbles 2.00 cm in diameter...Ch. 11 - Two identical, uniform beams weighing 260 N each...Ch. 11 - An engineer is designing a conveyor system for...Ch. 11 - A weight W is supported by attaching it to a...Ch. 11 - A garage door is mounted on an overhead rail (Fig....Ch. 11 - Pyramid Guilders. Ancient pyramid builders are...Ch. 11 - CP A 12.0-kg mass, fastened to the end of an...Ch. 11 - Hookes Law for a Wire. A wire of length l0 and...Ch. 11 - A 1.05-m-long rod of negligible weight is...Ch. 11 - CP An amusement park ride consists of...Ch. 11 - CP BIO Stress on the Shin Bone. The compressive...Ch. 11 - DATA You are to use a long, thin wire to build a...Ch. 11 - Prob. 11.87PCh. 11 - DATA You are a construction engineer working on...Ch. 11 - Two ladders, 4.00 m and 3.00 m long, are hinged at...Ch. 11 - Knocking Over a Post. One end of a post weighing...Ch. 11 - CP An angler hangs a 4.50-kg fish from a vertical...Ch. 11 - BIO TORQUES AND TUG-OF-WAR. In a study of the...Ch. 11 - If he leans slightly farther back (increasing the...Ch. 11 - BIO TORQUES AND TUG-OF-WAR. In a study of the...Ch. 11 - BIO TORQUES AND TUG-OF-WAR. In a study of the...
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
- A car is traveling on a banked curve as shown in the figure below. The radius of curvature of the road is R, the banking angle is 0, and the coefficient of static friction is μs. nx R A ny (a) Determine the range of speeds the car can have without slipping up or down the road. (Use any variable or symbol stated above along with the following as necessary: g. Note that the subscript of V min = Vmax = (b) Find the minimum value for μ such that the minimum speed is zero. (Use the following as necessary: R, 0, and g.) μs = μs is lowercase.)arrow_forwardUse the data of this table to find the point between Pluto and the Sun at which an object can be placed so that the net gravitational force exerted by Pluto and Sun on that object is zero. m from the center of Plutoarrow_forward(a) Imagine that a space probe could be fired as a projectile from the Earth's surface with an initial speed of 5.78 × 104 m/s relative to the Sun. What would its speed be when it is very far from the Earth (in m/s)? Ignore atmospheric friction, the effects of other planets, and the rotation of the Earth. (Consider the mass of the Sun in your calculations.) m/s (b) What If? The speed provided in part (a) is very difficult to achieve technologically. Often, Jupiter is used as a "gravitational slingshot" to increase the speed of a probe to the escape speed from the solar system, which is 1.85 x 104 m/s from a point on Jupiter's orbit around the Sun (if Jupiter is not nearby). If the probe is launched from the Earth's surface at a speed of 4.10 × 104 m/s relative to the Sun, what is the increase in speed needed from the gravitational slingshot at Jupiter for the space probe to escape the solar system (in m/s)? (Assume that the Earth and the point on Jupiter's orbit lie along the same…arrow_forward
- A spacecraft in the shape of a long cylinder has a length of 100 m, and its mass with occupants is 1 860 kg. It has strayed too close to a black hole having a mass 98 times that of the Sun. The nose of the spacecraft points toward the black hole, and the distance between the nose and the center of the black hole is 10.0 km. H 100 m- Black hole //10.0 km/ i (a) Determine the total force on the spacecraft. N (b) What is the difference in the gravitational fields acting on the occupants in the nose of the ship and on those in the rear of the ship, farthest from the black hole? (This difference in acceleration grows rapidly as the ship approaches the black hole. It puts the body of the ship under extreme tension and eventually tears it apart.) N/kgarrow_forwardThree uniform spheres of masses m₁ = 3.00 kg, m₂ = 4.00 kg, and m3 = 6.50 kg are placed at the corners of a right triangle (see figure below). Calculate the resultant gravitational force on the object of mass m2, assuming the spheres are isolated from the rest of the Universe. Ĵ) × 10-11 N Î + (0, 3.00) m 1)x m₁ (-4.00, 0) m F12 m3 32 0 x m2arrow_forwardA spring with unstretched length of 14.3 cm has a spring constant of 4.63 N/m. The spring is lying on a horizontal surface, and is attached at one end to a vertical post. The spring can move freely around the post. The other end of the spring is attached to a puck of mass m. The puck is set into motion in a circle around the post with a period of 1.32 s. Assume the surface is frictionless, and the spring can be described by Hooke's law. (a) What is the extension of the spring as a function of m? (Assume x is in meters and m is in kilograms. Do not include units in your answer.) x = Find x (in meters) for the following masses. (If not possible, enter IMPOSSIBLE.) (b) m = 0.0700 kg m (c) m = 0.140 kg (d) m 0.180 kg m m (e) m = 0.210 kg marrow_forward
- A stuntman whose mass is 62 kg swings from the end of a 4.1-m-long rope along the arc of a vertical circle. Assuming that he starts from rest when the rope is horizontal, find the magnitudes of the tensions in the rope that are required to make him follow his circular path at each of the following points. (a) at the beginning of his motion KN (b) at a height of 1.5 m above the bottom of the circular arc KN (c) at the bottom of the arc KNarrow_forward(a) A luggage carousel at an airport has the form of a section of a large cone, steadily rotating about its vertical axis. Its metallic surface slopes downward toward the outside, making an angle of 24.5° with the horizontal. A 30.0-kg piece of luggage is placed on the carousel, 7.46 m from the axis of rotation. The travel bag goes around once in 37.5 s. Calculate the magnitude of the force of static friction between the bag and the carousel. N (b) The drive motor is shifted to turn the carousel at a higher constant rate of rotation, and the piece of luggage is bumped to a position 7.94 m from the axis of rotation. The bag is on the verge of slipping as it goes around once every 30.5 s. Calculate the coefficient of static friction between the bag and the carousel.arrow_forwardShown below is a waterslide constructed in the late 1800's. This slide was unique for its time due to the fact that a large number of small wheels along its length made friction negligible. Riders rode a small sled down the chute which ended with a horizontal section that caused the sled and rider to skim across the water much like a flat pebble. The chute was 9.76 m high at the top and 54.3 m long. Consider a rider and sled with a combined mass of 81.0 kg. They are pushed off the top of the slide from point A with a speed of 2.90 m/s, and they skim horizontally across the water a distance of 50 m before coming to rest. 9.76 m Engraving from Scientific American, July 1888 A (a) 20.0 m -54.3 m 50.0 m (b) (a) Find the speed (in m/s) of the sled and rider at point C. m/s (b) Model the force of water friction as a constant retarding force acting on a particle. Find the magnitude (in N) of the friction force the water exerts on the sled. N (c) Find the magnitude (in N) of the force the…arrow_forward
- You have an internship working at a company that designs and produces washing and drying equipment. Your supervisor is in the process of designing a new, very large dryer to be used in commercial establishments with intense laundry needs, such as restaurants (tablecloths, napkins) and hotels (sheets, towels). In a dryer, a cylindrical tub containing wet material is rotated steadily about a horizontal axis as shown in the figure below. 0 So that the material will dry uniformly, it is made to tumble. The rate of rotation of the smooth-walled tub is chosen so that a small piece of cloth will lose contact with the tub when the cloth is at an angle of 0 = 71.0° above the horizontal. Your supervisor's tub is designed to have a radius of r = 1.23 m and she asks you to determine the appropriate rate of revolution. (Give your answer in rev/min.) rev/minarrow_forwardA golf tee is located at precisely ; = 46.5° north latitude, as shown in the figure below. The hole that the golfer is aiming for is directly south of the tee, a distance of 370 m. The golfer hits the ball from this tee with an initial velocity that is 48.0° above the horizontal, and the horizontal component of the ball's initial velocity is directly south. The horizontal range that the golf ball travels in flight is also 370 m, but the golfer is surprised to find that the golf ball does not land in the hole. We will assume that air resistance is negligible for the golf ball. The questions below analyze how the Earth's rotation affects the golf ball's apparent trajectory. North Pole Radius of circular path of tee RECOS ; RE Tee Golf ball trajectory -Hole Equator (a) For what length of time is the ball in flight (in s)? S (b) From the point of view of the golf tee, the ball's horizontal velocity is directed south. However, the golf tee, and therefore the golf ball, are moving east due…arrow_forwardOne end of a cord is fixed and a small 0.450-kg object is attached to the other end, where it swings in a section of a vertical circle of radius 3.00 m as shown in the figure below. When 0 = 23.0°, the speed of the object is 7.00 m/s. At this instant, find each of the following i (a) the tension in the cord T = × Your response differs from the correct answer by more than 10%. Double check your calculations. N (b) the tangential and radial components of acceleration a₁ = Your response differs from the correct answer by more than 10%. Double check your calculations. m/s² inward a₁ = m/s² downward tangent to the circle (c) the total acceleration a total = × Your response differs from the correct answer by more than 10%. Double check your calculations. m/s² inward and below the cord at Your response differs from the correct answer by more than 100%.° (d) Is your answer changed if the object is swinging down toward its lowest point instead of swinging up? ○ Yes No ×arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and EngineersPhysicsISBN:9781337553278Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern ...PhysicsISBN:9781337553292Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage Learning
- College PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781938168000Author:Paul Peter Urone, Roger HinrichsPublisher:OpenStax CollegePhysics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage LearningCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage Learning

Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning

Physics for Scientists and Engineers
Physics
ISBN:9781337553278
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning

Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern ...
Physics
ISBN:9781337553292
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning

College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781938168000
Author:Paul Peter Urone, Roger Hinrichs
Publisher:OpenStax College

Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...
Physics
ISBN:9781133939146
Author:Katz, Debora M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning

College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781285737027
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning