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Essential University Physics (3rd Edition)
3rd Edition
ISBN: 9780134202709
Author: Richard Wolfson
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 11.1, Problem 11.1GI
You’re standing on the sidewalk watching a car go by on the adjacent road, moving from left to right. The direction of the
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Define operational amplifier
A bungee jumper plans to bungee jump from a bridge 64.0 m above the ground. He plans to use a uniform elastic cord, tied to a harness around his body, to stop his fall at a point 6.00 m above the water. Model his body as a particle and the cord as having negligible mass and obeying
Hooke's law. In a preliminary test he finds that when hanging at rest from a 5.00 m length of the cord, his body weight stretches it by 1.55 m. He will drop from rest at the point where the top end of a longer section of the cord is attached to the bridge.
(a) What length of cord should he use?
Use subscripts 1 and 2 respectively to represent the 5.00 m test length and the actual jump length. Use Hooke's law F = KAL and the fact that the change in length AL for a given force is proportional the length L (AL = CL), to determine the force constant for the test case and for the
jump case. Use conservation of mechanical energy to determine the length of the rope. m
(b) What maximum acceleration will he…
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Figure 1: Circuit symbols for a variety of useful circuit elements
Problem 04.07 (17 points). Answer the following questions related to the figure below.
A What is the equivalent resistance of the network of resistors in the circuit below?
B If the battery has an EMF of 9V and is considered as an ideal batter (internal resistance
is zero), how much current flows through it in this circuit?
C If the 9V EMF battery has an internal resistance of 2 2, would this current be larger
or smaller? By how much?
D In the ideal battery case, calculate the current through and the voltage across each
resistor in the circuit.
Chapter 11 Solutions
Essential University Physics (3rd Edition)
Ch. 11.1 - Youre standing on the sidewalk watching a car go...Ch. 11.2 - The figure shows four pairs of force and radius...Ch. 11.3 - The figure shows three particles with the same...Ch. 11.4 - You step onto an initially nonrotating turntable...Ch. 11.5 - You push horizontally at right angles to the shaft...Ch. 11 - Does Earths angular velocity vector point north or...Ch. 11 - Figure 11.12 shows four forces acting on a body....Ch. 11 - You stand with your right arm extended...Ch. 11 - Although it contains no parentheses, the...Ch. 11 - Whats the angle between two vectors if their dot...
Ch. 11 - Why does a tetherball move faster as it winds up...Ch. 11 - Why do helicopters have two rotors?Ch. 11 - A group of polar bears is standing around the edge...Ch. 11 - Tornadoes in the northern hemisphere rotate...Ch. 11 - Does a particle moving at constant speed in a...Ch. 11 - When you turn on a high-speed power tool such as a...Ch. 11 - Why is it easier to balance a basketball on your...Ch. 11 - A bug, initially at rest on a stationary,...Ch. 11 - If you increase the rotation rate of a precessing...Ch. 11 - A car is headed north at 70 km/h. Give the...Ch. 11 - If the car of Exercise 15 makes a 90 left turn...Ch. 11 - A wheel is spinning at 45 rpm with its axis...Ch. 11 - A wheel is spinning about a horizontal axis with...Ch. 11 - A 12-N force is applied at the point x = 3 m, y =...Ch. 11 - A force F=1.3i+2.7jN is applied at the point x =...Ch. 11 - When you hold your arm outstretched, its supported...Ch. 11 - Express the units of angular momentum (a) using...Ch. 11 - In the Olympic hammer throw, a contestant whirls a...Ch. 11 - A gymnast of rotational inertia 62 kg m2 is...Ch. 11 - A 640-g hoop 90 cm in diameter is rotating at 170...Ch. 11 - A 7.4-cm-diameter baseball has mass 145 g and is...Ch. 11 - A potters wheel with rotational inertia 6.40 kg ...Ch. 11 - A 3.0-m-diametcr merry-go-round with rotational...Ch. 11 - A uniform, spherical cloud of interstellar gas has...Ch. 11 - A skater has rotational inertia 4.2 kg m2 with...Ch. 11 - You slip a wrench over a bolt. Taking the origin...Ch. 11 - Vector A points 30 counterclockwise from the...Ch. 11 - A baseball player extends his arm straight up to...Ch. 11 - Prob. 34PCh. 11 - A weightlifters barbell consists of two 25-kg...Ch. 11 - Prob. 36PCh. 11 - Two identical 1800-kg cars are traveling in...Ch. 11 - The dot product of two vectors is half the...Ch. 11 - Biomechanical engineers have developed...Ch. 11 - Figure 11.15 shows the dimensions of a 880-g...Ch. 11 - As an automotive engineer, youre charged with...Ch. 11 - A turntable of radius 25 cm and rotational inertia...Ch. 11 - A 17-kg dog is standing on the edge of a...Ch. 11 - A physics student is standing on an initially...Ch. 11 - Youre choreographing your schools annual ice show....Ch. 11 - Find the angle between two vectors whose dot...Ch. 11 - A circular bird feeder 19 cm in radius has...Ch. 11 - A force F applied at the point x = 2.0 m, y = 0 m...Ch. 11 - Prob. 49PCh. 11 - Prob. 50PCh. 11 - Jumbo is back! Jumbo is the 4.8-Mg elephant from...Ch. 11 - An anemometer for measuring wind speeds consists...Ch. 11 - A turntable has rotational inertia I and is...Ch. 11 - A uniform, solid, spherical asteroid with mass 1.2...Ch. 11 - About 99.9% of the solar systems total mass lies...Ch. 11 - Youre a civil engineer for an advanced...Ch. 11 - In Fig. 11.18, the lower disk, of mass 440 g and...Ch. 11 - A massless spring with constant k is mounted on a...Ch. 11 - A solid ball of mass M and radius R is spinning...Ch. 11 - A time-dependent torque given by = a + b sin ct...Ch. 11 - Consider a rapidly spinning gyroscope whose axis...Ch. 11 - When a star like our Sun exhausts its fuel,...Ch. 11 - Pulsarsthe rapidly rotating neutron stars...Ch. 11 - Prob. 64PCh. 11 - Figure 11.22 shows a demonstration gyroscope,...Ch. 11 - Figure 11.22 shows a demonstration gyroscope,...Ch. 11 - Figure 11.22 shows a demonstration gyroscope,...Ch. 11 - Figure 11.22 shows a demonstration gyroscope,...
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