College Physics (10th Edition)
10th Edition
ISBN: 9780321902788
Author: Hugh D. Young, Philip W. Adams, Raymond Joseph Chastain
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 11, Problem 5CQ
Which could you use as a timekeeping device in an orbiting satellite, a pendulum or a mass on a spring? Or could you use them both? Why?
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Chapter 11 Solutions
College Physics (10th Edition)
Ch. 11 - Think of several examples in everyday life of...Ch. 11 - The analysis of simple harmonic motion in this...Ch. 11 - In any periodic motion, unavoidable friction...Ch. 11 - At what point in the motion of a simple pendulum...Ch. 11 - Which could you use as a timekeeping device in an...Ch. 11 - What happens to the original energy as a damped...Ch. 11 - Distinguish clearly between the angular frequency...Ch. 11 - It is easy to get mixed up and think that the...Ch. 11 - If a metal wire has its length doubled and its...Ch. 11 - Would you expect a rubber band to have a larger or...
Ch. 11 - In designing structures in an earthquake-prone...Ch. 11 - A springmass system is undergoing simple harmonic...Ch. 11 - Suppose you increase the amplitude of oscillation...Ch. 11 - An object of mass M suspended by a spring vibrates...Ch. 11 - When two wires of identical dimensions are used to...Ch. 11 - A mass on a spring oscillates with a period T. If...Ch. 11 - A pendulum oscillates with a period T. If both the...Ch. 11 - When a 100 kg mass is hung from a cable made of a...Ch. 11 - An object with mass M suspended by a spring...Ch. 11 - A pendulum on earth swings with angular frequency...Ch. 11 - A mass oscillates with simple harmonic motion of...Ch. 11 - A thin, light wire 75.0 cm long having a circular...Ch. 11 - A petite young woman distributes her 500 N weight...Ch. 11 - Two circular rods, one steel and the other copper,...Ch. 11 - A 5.0 kg mass is hung by a vertical steel wire...Ch. 11 - Biceps muscle. A relaxed biceps muscle requires a...Ch. 11 - Stress on a mountaineers rope. A nylon rope used...Ch. 11 - A steel wire 2.00 m long with circular cross...Ch. 11 - Achilles tendon. The Achilles tendon, which...Ch. 11 - Human hair. According to one set of measurements,...Ch. 11 - The effect of jogging on the knees. High-impact...Ch. 11 - A small aluminum sphere is placed in a vacuum...Ch. 11 - In the Challenger Deep of the Marianas Trench, the...Ch. 11 - Effect of diving on blood. It is reasonable to...Ch. 11 - Shear forces are applied to a rectangular solid....Ch. 11 - Compression of human bone. The bulk modulus for...Ch. 11 - In Figure 11.30, suppose the object is a square...Ch. 11 - Figure 11.31 Problem 17. 17. A cube of brass has a...Ch. 11 - A steel wire has the following properties: Length...Ch. 11 - A steel cable with cross-sectional area of 3.00...Ch. 11 - Weight lifting. The legs of a weight lifter must...Ch. 11 - (a) Music. When a person sings, his or her vocal...Ch. 11 - Find the period, frequency, and angular frequency...Ch. 11 - If an object on a horizontal frictionless surface...Ch. 11 - The graph shown in Figure 11.32 closely...Ch. 11 - The wings of the blue-throated hummingbird, which...Ch. 11 - A 0.500 kg glider on an air track is attached to...Ch. 11 - A toy is undergoing SHM on the end of a horizontal...Ch. 11 - A 2.00 kg frictionless block is attached to an...Ch. 11 - A 2.00 kg frictionless block is attached to an...Ch. 11 - You are watching an object that is moving in SHM....Ch. 11 - A mass is oscillating with amplitude A at the end...Ch. 11 - (a) If a vibrating system has total energy E0,...Ch. 11 - A 2.40 kg ball is attached to an unknown spring...Ch. 11 - A concrete block is hung from an ideal spring that...Ch. 11 - One end of a stretched ideal spring is attached to...Ch. 11 - A mass of 0.20 kg on the end of a spring...Ch. 11 - A harmonic oscillator is made by using a 0.600 kg...Ch. 11 - Weighing astronauts. In order to study the...Ch. 11 - Prob. 39PCh. 11 - An object of unknown mass is attached to an ideal...Ch. 11 - A science museum has asked you to design a simple...Ch. 11 - A simple pendulum in a science museum entry hall...Ch. 11 - Youve made a simple pendulum with a length of 1.55...Ch. 11 - A pendulum consisting of a 0.5 kg mass tied to a...Ch. 11 - A pendulum on Mars. A certain simple pendulum has...Ch. 11 - In the laboratory, a student studies a pendulum by...Ch. 11 - (a) If a pendulum has period T and you double its...Ch. 11 - A 1.35 kg object is attached to a horizontal...Ch. 11 - A 2.50 kg rock is attached at the end of a thin,...Ch. 11 - A mass is vibrating at the end of a spring of...Ch. 11 - What is the maximum kinetic energy of the...Ch. 11 - A small cylindrical brass bar of length 1 cm and...Ch. 11 - An astronaut uses a simple pendulum to measure the...Ch. 11 - An astronaut notices that a pendulum that took...Ch. 11 - An object suspended from a spring vibrates with...Ch. 11 - A pendulum is formed by taking a 2 kg mass and...Ch. 11 - An apple weighs 1.00 N. When you hang it from the...Ch. 11 - A block with mass M rests on a frictionless...Ch. 11 - In Figure 11.38 the upper ball is released from...Ch. 11 - A 15.0 kg mass fastened to the end of a steel wire...Ch. 11 - You hang a floodlamp from the end of a vertical...Ch. 11 - Tendon-stretching exercises. As part of an...Ch. 11 - A 100 kg mass suspended from a wire whose...Ch. 11 - A brass rod with a length of 1.40 m and a...Ch. 11 - Crude oil with a bulk modulus of 2.35 GPa is...Ch. 11 - Seeing surfaces at the nanoscale. One technique...Ch. 11 - What is the mechanical energy of the vibration...Ch. 11 - By what percentage does the frequency of...
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- Use the data in Table P16.59 for a block of mass m = 0.250 kg and assume friction is negligible. a. Write an expression for the force FH exerted by the spring on the block. b. Sketch FH versus t.arrow_forwardConsider the data for a block of mass m = 0.250 kg given in Table P16.59. Friction is negligible. a. What is the mechanical energy of the blockspring system? b. Write expressions for the kinetic and potential energies as functions of time. c. Plot the kinetic energy, potential energy, and mechanical energy as functions of time on the same set of axes. Problems 5965 are grouped. 59. G Table P16.59 gives the position of a block connected to a horizontal spring at several times. Sketch a motion diagram for the block. Table P16.59arrow_forwardReview. This problem extends the reasoning of Problem 41 in Chapter 9. Two gliders are set in motion on an air track. Glider 1 has mass m1 = 0.240 kg and moves to the right with speed 0.740 m/s. It will have a rear-end collision with glider 2, of mass m2 = 0.360 kg, which initially moves to the right with speed 0.120 m/s. A light spring of force constant 45.0 N/m is attached to the back end of glider 2 as shown in Figure P9.41. When glider 1 touches the spring, superglue instantly and permanently makes it stick to its end of the spring. (a) Find the common speed the two gliders have when the spring is at maximum compression. (b) Find the maximum spring compression distance. The motion after the gliders become attached consists of a combination of (1) the constant-velocity motion of the center of mass of the two-glider system found in part (a) and (2) simple harmonic motion of the gliders relative to the center of mass. (c) Find the energy of the center-of-mass motion. (d) Find the energy of the oscillation.arrow_forward
- A grandfather clock has a pendulum length of 0.7 m and mass bob of 0.4 kg. A mass of 2 kg falls 0.8 m in seven days to keep the amplitude (from equilibrium) of the pendulum oscillation steady at 0.03 rad. What is the Q of the system?arrow_forwardA simple pendulum as shown in Fig. 4.24 oscillates back and forth. Use the letter designations in the figure to identify the pendulums position(s) for the following conditions. (There may be more than one answer. Consider the pendulum to be ideal with no energy losses.) (a) Position(s) of instantaneous rest ___ (b) Position(s) of maximum velocity ___ (c) Position(s) of maximum Ek ___ (d) Position(s) of maximum Ep ___ (e) Position(s) of minimum Ek ___ (f) Position(s) of minimum Ep ___ (g) Position(s) after which Ek increases ___ (h) Position(s) after which Ep increases ___ (i) Position(s) after which Ek decreases ___ (j) Position(s) after which Ep decreases ___ Figure 4.24 The Simple Pendulum and Energyarrow_forwardCheck Your Understanding An engineer builds two simple pendulums. Both are suspended from small wires secured to the ceiling of a room. Each pendulum hovers 2 cm above the floor. Pendulum 1 has a bob with a mass of 10 kg. Pendulum 2 has a bob with a mass of 100 kg. Describe how the motion of the pendulums will differ if the bobs are both displaced by 12°.arrow_forward
- A 50.0-g object connected to a spring with a force constant of 35.0 N/m oscillates with an amplitude of 4.00 cm on a frictionless, horizontal surface. Find (a) the total energy of the system and (b) the speed of the object when its position is 1.00 cm. Find (c) the kinetic energy and (d) the potential energy when its position is 3.00 cm.arrow_forwardThe amplitude of a lightly damped oscillator decreases by 3.0% during each cycle. What percentage of the mechanical energy of the oscillator is lost in each cycle?arrow_forwardA 75.0-kg firefighter slides down a pole while a constant friction force of 300 N retards her motion. A horizontal 20.0-kg platform is supported by a spring at the bottom of the pole to cushion the fall. The firefighter starts from rest 4.00 m above the platform, and the spring constant is 4 000 N/m. Find (a) the firefighters speed just before she collides with the platform and (b) the maximum distance the spring is compressed. Assume the friction force acts during the entire motion.arrow_forward
- A particle of mass m moving in one dimension has potential energy U(x) = U0[2(x/a)2 (x/a)4], where U0 and a are positive constants. (a) Find the force F(x), which acts on the particle. (b) Sketch U(x). Find the positions of stable and unstable equilibrium. (c) What is the angular frequency of oscillations about the point of stable equilibrium? (d) What is the minimum speed the particle must have at the origin to escape to infinity? (e) At t = 0 the particle is at the origin and its velocity is positive and equal in magnitude to the escape speed of part (d). Find x(t) and sketch the result.arrow_forwardIf the amplitude of a damped oscillator decreases to 1/e of its initial value after n periods, show that the frequency of the oscillator must be approximately [1 − (8π2n2)−1] times the frequency of the corresponding undamped oscillator.arrow_forwardSome people modify cars to be much closer to the ground than when manufactured. Should they install stiffer springs? Explain your answer.arrow_forward
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