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
Textbook Question
Chapter 14, Problem 14.14E
Repeat Exercise 14.13, but assume that at t = 0 the block has velocity −4.00 m/s and displacement +0.200 m.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
A particle undergoes three consecutive displacements: AT, = (15î + 30j + 12k) cm, Af, = (23 î – 14j – 5.0k) cm, and
AT, = (-13î+ 15j) cm. Find unit-vector notation for the resultant displacement and its magnitude.
A particle undergoes three consecutive displacements d1=(1.5i+3.0j-1.2km) cm, d2=(2.3i-1.4j-3.6k) cm and d3=(-1.3i+1.5j) cm. find the component and its magnitude.
The position of an object at time is given by the parametric equations . x= 4t^2+2t , y=3t^2+4Find the horizontal velocity, the vertical velocity, and the speed at the moment where t=1 . Do not worry about units in this problem.Horizontal Velocity = Vertical Velocity = Speed =
Chapter 14 Solutions
University Physics (14th Edition)
Ch. 14 - An object is moving with SHM of amplitude A on the...Ch. 14 - Think of several examples in everyday life of...Ch. 14 - Does a tuning fork or similar tuning instrument...Ch. 14 - A box containing a pebble is attached to an ideal...Ch. 14 - If a uniform spring is cut in half, what is the...Ch. 14 - A glider is attached to a fixed ideal spring and...Ch. 14 - Two identical gliders on an air track are...Ch. 14 - You are captured by Martians, taken into their...Ch. 14 - The system shown in Fig. 14.17 is mounted in an...Ch. 14 - If a pendulum has a period of 2.5 s on earth, what...
Ch. 14 - A simple pendulum is mounted in an elevator. What...Ch. 14 - What should you do to the length of the string of...Ch. 14 - If a pendulum clock is taken to a mountaintop,...Ch. 14 - When the amplitude of a simple pendulum increases,...Ch. 14 - Prob. Q14.15DQCh. 14 - At what point in the motion of a simple pendulum...Ch. 14 - Could a standard of time be based on the period of...Ch. 14 - For a simple pendulum, clearly distinguish between...Ch. 14 - In designing structures in an earthquake-prone...Ch. 14 - BIO (a) Music. When a person sings, his or her...Ch. 14 - If an object on a horizontal, frictionless surface...Ch. 14 - The tip of a tuning fork goes through 440 complete...Ch. 14 - The displacement of an oscillating object as a...Ch. 14 - A machine part is undergoing SUM with a frequency...Ch. 14 - BIO The wings of the blue-throated hummingbird...Ch. 14 - A 2.40-kg ball is attached to an unknown spring...Ch. 14 - In a physics lab, you attach a 0.200-kg air-track...Ch. 14 - When a body of unknown mass is attached to an...Ch. 14 - When a 0.750-kg mass oscillates on an ideal...Ch. 14 - An object is undergoing SHM with period 0.900 s...Ch. 14 - A small block is attached to an ideal spring and...Ch. 14 - A 2.00-kg. frictionless block is attached to an...Ch. 14 - Repeat Exercise 14.13, but assume that at t = 0...Ch. 14 - The point of the needle of a sewing machine moves...Ch. 14 - A small block is attached to an ideal spring and...Ch. 14 - BIO Weighing Astronauts. This procedure has been...Ch. 14 - A 0.400-kg object undergoing SHM has ax = 1.80...Ch. 14 - On a frictionless, horizontal air track, a glider...Ch. 14 - A 0.500-kg mass on a spring has velocity as a...Ch. 14 - A 1.50-kg mass on a spring has displacement as a...Ch. 14 - BIO Weighing a Virus. In February 2004, scientists...Ch. 14 - CALC Jerk. A guitar string vibrates at a frequency...Ch. 14 - For the oscillating object in Fig. E14.4, what are...Ch. 14 - A small block is attached to an ideal spring and...Ch. 14 - A small block is attached to an ideal spring and...Ch. 14 - A 0.150-kg toy is undergoing SHM on the end of a...Ch. 14 - A harmonic oscillator has angular frequency and...Ch. 14 - A 0.500-kg glider, attached to the end of an ideal...Ch. 14 - A cheerleader waves her pom-pom in SHM with an...Ch. 14 - CP For the situation described in part (a) of...Ch. 14 - A block with mass m = 0.300 kg is attached to one...Ch. 14 - You are watching an object that is moving in SHM....Ch. 14 - A 2.00-kg frictionless block is attached to an...Ch. 14 - A 2.00-kg frictionless block attached to an ideal...Ch. 14 - A mass is oscillating with amplitude A at the end...Ch. 14 - A 175-g glider on a horizontal, frictionless air...Ch. 14 - A proud deep-sea fisherman hangs a 65.0-kg fish...Ch. 14 - A thrill-seeking cat with mass 4.00 kg is attached...Ch. 14 - A uniform, solid metal disk of mass 6.50 kg and...Ch. 14 - A certain alarm clock ticks four times each...Ch. 14 - A thin metal disk with mass 2.00 103 kg and...Ch. 14 - You want to find the moment of inertia of a...Ch. 14 - CALC The balance wheel of a watch vibrates with an...Ch. 14 - You pull a simple pendulum 0.240 m long to the...Ch. 14 - An 85.0-kg mountain climber plans to swing down,...Ch. 14 - A building in San Francisco has light fixtures...Ch. 14 - A Pendulum on Mars. A certain simple pendulum has...Ch. 14 - After landing on an unfamiliar planet, a space...Ch. 14 - In the laboratory, a student studies a pendulum by...Ch. 14 - A simple pendulum 2.00 m long swings through a...Ch. 14 - A small sphere with mass m is attached to a...Ch. 14 - Two pendulums have the same dimensions (length L)...Ch. 14 - We want to hang a thin hoop on a horizontal nail...Ch. 14 - A 1.80-kg connecting rod from a car engine is...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.56ECh. 14 - The two pendulums shown in Fig. E14.57 each...Ch. 14 - CP A holiday ornament in the shape of a hollow...Ch. 14 - A 1.35-kg object is attached to a horizontal...Ch. 14 - A 50.0-g hard-boiled egg moves on the end of a...Ch. 14 - An unhappy 0.300-kg rodent, moving on the end of a...Ch. 14 - A mass is vibrating at the end of a spring of...Ch. 14 - A sinusoidally varying driving force is applied to...Ch. 14 - An object is undergoing SHM with period 0.300 s...Ch. 14 - An object is undergoing SHM with period 1.200 s...Ch. 14 - Four passengers with combined mass 250 kg compress...Ch. 14 - At the end of a ride at a winter-theme amusement...Ch. 14 - CP A block with mass M rests on a frictionless...Ch. 14 - A 1.50-kg, horizontal, uniform tray is attached to...Ch. 14 - CP A 10.0-kg mass is traveling to the right with a...Ch. 14 - An apple weighs 1.00 N. When you hang it from the...Ch. 14 - CP SHM of a Floating Object. An object with height...Ch. 14 - CP A square object of mass m is constructed of...Ch. 14 - An object with mass 0.200 kg is acted on by an...Ch. 14 - CALC A 2.00-kg bucket containing 10.0 kg of water...Ch. 14 - A uniform beam is suspended horizontally by two...Ch. 14 - A 5.00-kg partridge is suspended from a pear tree...Ch. 14 - A 0.0200-kg bolt moves with SHM that has an...Ch. 14 - CP SHM of a Butchers Scale. A spring of negligible...Ch. 14 - A 40.0-N force stretches a vertical spring 0.250...Ch. 14 - Dont Miss the Boat. While on a visit to Minnesota...Ch. 14 - CP An interesting, though highly impractical...Ch. 14 - CP A rifle bullet with mass 8.00 g and initial...Ch. 14 - CP Two uniform solid spheres, each with mass M =...Ch. 14 - CP In Fig. P14.85 the upper ball is released from...Ch. 14 - The Silently Ringing Bell. A large, 34.0-kg bell...Ch. 14 - CALC A slender, uniform, metal rod with mass M is...Ch. 14 - Two identical thin rods, each with mass m and...Ch. 14 - DATA A mass m is attached to a spring of force...Ch. 14 - DATA You hang various masses m from the end of a...Ch. 14 - DATA Experimenting with pendulums, you attach a...Ch. 14 - The Effective Force Constant of Two Springs. Two...Ch. 14 - CALC A Spring with Mass. The preceding problems in...Ch. 14 - BIO SEEING SURFACES AT THE NANOSCALE. One...Ch. 14 - In the model of Problem 14.94, what is the...Ch. 14 - By what percentage does the frequency of...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
Express the unit vectors in terms of (that is, derive Eq. 1.64). Check your answers several ways Also work o...
Introduction to Electrodynamics
During a hailstorm, hailstones with an average mass of 2 g and a speed of 15 m/s strike a window pane at 45 ang...
An Introduction to Thermal Physics
1. When is energy most evident?
Conceptual Physics (12th Edition)
33. A metal wire of resistance R is cut into two pieces of equal length. The two pieces are connected together ...
College Physics: A Strategic Approach (4th Edition)
You friend claims that momentum is mass multiplied by velocity, so things with more mass have more momentum. Do...
University Physics Volume 1
13. A supply plane needs to drop a package of food to scientists working on a glacier in Greenland. The plane f...
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: A Strategic Approach, Vol. 1 (Chs 1-21) (4th 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
- The circus rehearses an idea to spice up the act. When the acrobat steps off, a bunch of plastic flowers will be fired at her out of a cannon, and she will catch the bunch as she falls. The bore of the cannon is at the same height as the trampoline. (a) Choose values for the following. None of them can be 0. i. The distance from the bore of the cannon to the trampoline. 18m ii. The initial velocity of the flowers. This must be high enough to reach the acrobat before she lands. 45 m/s (b) Draw a picture. Label the origin and axes. (c) Create a table showing the information you know for the flowers. (d) Determine the launch angle of the flowers so the acrobat can catch them. (e) Calculate all unknowns about the motion of the flowers. (f) Determine the velocity of the bunch of flowers relative to the acrobat at the time she catches themarrow_forward3) The upward velocity of the rocket is measured with respect to time and the data is given in the following table. Velocity vs time data for a rocket Time, t(s) Velocity, V (m/s) 105.7 8. 175.2 12 278.2 We wanted to approximate the velocity profile by v(t=at*+bt+c,5sts12 Please construct the set of linear equation and solve the equation for the coefficients a, b and c in v (t).arrow_forwardThe position of a particle changes from r ⃗ 1 = (2.0i ^ + 3.0j ^ )cm to r ⃗ 2 = (−4.0i ^ + 3.0j ^ ) cm. What is the particle’s displacement?arrow_forward
- The motion of a dog is observed to be given by the function r = (1.9 m/s²) t²i-[(0.7 m/s³) t³-2.9 mlj. What is the magnitude of the instantaneous velocity of the dog between t=0 and t=3.07 s? O 8.12 m/s O 7.48 m/s 24.94 m/s O 22.97 m/sarrow_forwardQ6. For a SDOF system, m=50kg, k=20kN/m, c=3kNs/m. The system has an initial velocity of 150mm/s and no initial displacement. Obtain the equation of motion and find the displacement at 1 second.arrow_forward6.00k, with t in seconds and r in meters. An electron's position is given by 7 = 4.00tî – 5.00t2 ĵ + (a) In unit-vector notation, what is the electron's velocity v (t)? (Use the following as necessary: t.) V (t) = m/s (b) What is v in unit-vector notation at t = 5.00 s? v(t = 5.00) = m/s (c) What is the magnitude of v at t = 5.00 s? m/s (d) What angle does v make with the positive direction of the x axis at t = 5.00 s? ° (from the +x axis)arrow_forward
- need fast plsssssarrow_forwardV6arrow_forwardAt t = 0 an object starts from the origin and moves with a constant acceleration of a = (-4.72-1.4))m/s² on a horizontal surface. If the initial velocity of the object is v = (18.82 - 19.67)m/s, determine the magnitude of velocity at t = 5s. Express your answer in units of m/s using zero decimal places. Answer:arrow_forward
- A car moving in a straight line starts at xx = 00 at tt = 00 . It passes the point xx = 20.0 mm with a speed of 10.5 m/sm/s at tt = 3.00 ss . It passes the point xx = 380 mm with a speed of 45.0 m/sm/s at tt = 20.0 ss . Find the average velocity between tt = 3.00 ss and tt = 20.0 ss . answer with the appropriate units. Find the average acceleration between tt = 3.00 ss and tt = 20.0 ss . answer with the appropriate units.arrow_forwardA soccer player kicks a rock horizontally off a 32 m high cliff into a pool of water. If the player hears the sound of the splash 2.72 s later, what was the initial speed given to the rock (in m/s)? Assume the speed of sound in air is 343 m/s. m/s What If? If the temperature near the cliff suddenly falls to 0°C, reducing the speed of sound to 331 m/s, what would the initial speed of the rock have to be (in m/s) for the soccer player to hear the sound of the splash 2.72 s after kicking the rock? m/sarrow_forwardA landscape architect is planning an artificial waterfall in a city park. Water flowing at 1.70 m/s will leave the end of a horizontal channel at the top of a vertical wall h = 2.35 m high, and from there it will fall into a pool (Fig. P3.42). (a) Will the space behind the waterfall be wide enough for a pedestrian walkway? (b) To sell her plan to the city council, the architect wants to build a model to standard scale, which is one-twelfth actual size. How fast should the water flow in the channel in the model? Figure P3.42arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Glencoe Physics: Principles and Problems, Student...PhysicsISBN:9780078807213Author:Paul W. ZitzewitzPublisher:Glencoe/McGraw-HillPrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage Learning
Glencoe Physics: Principles and Problems, Student...
Physics
ISBN:9780078807213
Author:Paul W. Zitzewitz
Publisher:Glencoe/McGraw-Hill
Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
SIMPLE HARMONIC MOTION (Physics Animation); Author: EarthPen;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XjkUcJkGd3Y;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY