College Physics: A Strategic Approach (3rd Edition)
3rd Edition
ISBN: 9780321879721
Author: Randall D. Knight (Professor Emeritus), Brian Jones, Stuart Field
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 14, Problem 9P
What are the (a) amplitude and (b) frequency of the oscillation shown in Figure P14.9?
Figure P14.9
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College Physics: A Strategic Approach (3rd Edition)
Ch. 14 - Give three real-world examples of oscillatory...Ch. 14 - A persons heart rate is given in beats per minute....Ch. 14 - Figure Q14.3 shows the position-versus-time graph...Ch. 14 - A tall building is swaying back and forth on a...Ch. 14 - A child is on a swing, gently swinging back and...Ch. 14 - A block oscillating on a spring has an amplitude...Ch. 14 - A block oscillating on a spring has a maximum...Ch. 14 - A block oscillating on a spring has a maximum...Ch. 14 - For the graph in Figure Q14.9, determine the...Ch. 14 - For the graph in Figure Q14.10 , determine the...
Ch. 14 - A block oscillating on a spring has period t = 2.0...Ch. 14 - A pendulum on Planet X, where the value of g is...Ch. 14 - Flies flap their wings at frequencies much too...Ch. 14 - Denver is at a higher elevation than Miami; the...Ch. 14 - If you want to play a tune on wine glasses, youll...Ch. 14 - It is possible to identify promising locations for...Ch. 14 - Sprinters push off from the ball of their foot,...Ch. 14 - Gibbons move through the trees by swinging from...Ch. 14 - What is the difference between the driving...Ch. 14 - Humans have a range of hearing of approximately 20...Ch. 14 - A person driving a truck on a washboard road, one...Ch. 14 - Weve seen that stout tendons in the legs of...Ch. 14 - A spring has an unstretched length of 20 cm. A 100...Ch. 14 - Figure Q14.24 represents the motion of a mass on a...Ch. 14 - A ball of mass m oscillates on a spring with...Ch. 14 - A car bounces up and down on its springs at 1.0 Hz...Ch. 14 - If you carry heavy weights in your hands, how will...Ch. 14 - A heavy brass ball is used to make a pendulum with...Ch. 14 - Very loud sounds can damage hearing by injuring...Ch. 14 - When a guitar string plays the note A, the string...Ch. 14 - In the aftermath of an intense earthquake, the...Ch. 14 - In taking your pulse, you count 75 heartbeats in 1...Ch. 14 - A spring scale hung from the ceiling stretches by...Ch. 14 - A heavy steel ball is hung from a cord to make a...Ch. 14 - An air-track glider attached to a spring...Ch. 14 - An air-track glider is attached to a spring. The...Ch. 14 - What are the (a) amplitude and (b) frequency of...Ch. 14 - What are the (a) amplitude and (b) frequency of...Ch. 14 - During an earthquake, the top of a building...Ch. 14 - Some passengers on an ocean cruise may suffer from...Ch. 14 - A passenger car traveling down a rough road...Ch. 14 - The New England Merchants Bank Building in Boston...Ch. 14 - We can model the motion of a dragonflys wing as...Ch. 14 - We can model the motion of a bumblebees wing as...Ch. 14 - Hummingbirds may seem fragile, but their wings are...Ch. 14 - a. When the displacement of a mass on a spring is...Ch. 14 - A 1.0 kg block is attached to a spring with spring...Ch. 14 - A block attached to a spring with unknown spring...Ch. 14 - A 200 g air-track glider is attached to a spring....Ch. 14 - The position of a 50 g oscillating mass is given...Ch. 14 - A 50-em-long spring is suspended from the ceiling....Ch. 14 - A 200 g mass attached to a horizontal spring...Ch. 14 - A 507 g mass oscillates with an amplitude of 10.0...Ch. 14 - A mass on a string of unknown length oscillates as...Ch. 14 - The mass in a pendulum clock completes one...Ch. 14 - A 200 g ball is tied to a string. It is pulled to...Ch. 14 - The free-fall acceleration on the moon is 1.62...Ch. 14 - Astronauts on the first trip to Mars take along a...Ch. 14 - A building is being knocked down with a wrecking...Ch. 14 - Interestingly, there have been several studies...Ch. 14 - You and your friends find a rope that hangs down...Ch. 14 - A thin, circular hoop with a radius of 0.22 m is...Ch. 14 - Prob. 34PCh. 14 - The amplitude of an oscillator decreases to 36.8%...Ch. 14 - A physics department has a Foucault pendulum, a...Ch. 14 - Calculate and draw an accurate displacement graph...Ch. 14 - A small earthquake starts a lamppost vibrating...Ch. 14 - When you drive your car over a bump, the springs...Ch. 14 - Taipei 101 (a 101-story building in Taiwan) is...Ch. 14 - A 25 kg child sits on a 2.0-m-long rope swing. You...Ch. 14 - Your car rides on springs, so it will have a...Ch. 14 - Vision is blurred if the head is vibrated at 29 Hz...Ch. 14 - A spring has an unstretched length of 12 cm. When...Ch. 14 - A 0.40 kg ball is suspended from a spring with...Ch. 14 - A spring is hanging from the ceiling. Attaching a...Ch. 14 - A spring with spring constant 15.0 N/m hangs from...Ch. 14 - A spring is hung from the ceiling. When a coffee...Ch. 14 - On your first trip to Planet X you happen to take...Ch. 14 - An object oscillating on a spring has the velocity...Ch. 14 - The two graphs in Figure P14.51 are for two...Ch. 14 - As weve seen, astronauts measure their mass by...Ch. 14 - A 100 g ball attached to a spring with spring...Ch. 14 - The ultrasonic transducer used in a medical...Ch. 14 - A compact car has a mass of 1200 kg. When empty,...Ch. 14 - A car with a total mass of 1400 kg (including...Ch. 14 - A 500 g air-track glider attached to a spring with...Ch. 14 - A 1.00 kg block is attached to a horizontal spring...Ch. 14 - Figure P14.59 shows two springs, each with spring...Ch. 14 - Bungee Man is a superhero who does super deeds...Ch. 14 - The earths free-fall acceleration varies from...Ch. 14 - Orangutans can move by brachiation, swinging like...Ch. 14 - An infants toy has a 120 g wooden animal hanging...Ch. 14 - A jellyfish can propel itself with jets of water...Ch. 14 - A 200 g oscillator in a vacuum chamber has a...Ch. 14 - While seated on a tall bench, extend your lower...Ch. 14 - We can make a static measurement to deduce the...Ch. 14 - If, during a stride, the stretch causes her center...Ch. 14 - If we imagine a full cycle of the oscillation,...Ch. 14 - Given what you have calculated for the period of...Ch. 14 - Suppose a 12 mg fly lands in the center of a...Ch. 14 - Modeling the motion of the fly on the web as a...Ch. 14 - If the web were vertical rather than horizontal,...Ch. 14 - Spiders are more sensitive to oscillations at...
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- A uniform annular ring of mass m and inner and outer radii a and b, respectively, is pivoted around an axis perpendicular to the plane of the ring at point P (Fig. P16.35). Determine its period of oscillation. FIGURE P16.35arrow_forward(a) If frequency is not constant for some oscillation, can the oscillation be SHM? (b) Can you think of any examples of harmonic motion where the frequency may depend on the amplitude?arrow_forwardA small ball of mass M is attached to the end of a uniform rod of equal mass M and length L that is pivoted at the top (Fig. P12.59). Determine the tensions in the rod (a) at the pivot and (b) at the point P when the system is stationary. (c) Calculate the period of oscillation for small displacements from equilibrium and (d) determine this period for L = 2.00 m. Figure P12.59arrow_forward
- A block of mass m rests on a frictionless, horizontal surface and is attached to two springs with spring constants k1 and k2 (Fig. P16.22). It is displaced to the right and released. Find an expression for the angular frequency of oscillation of the resulting simple harmonic motion. FIGURE P16.22 Problems 22 and 81.arrow_forwardConsider the simplified single-piston engine in Figure CQ12.13. Assuming the wheel rotates with constant angular speed, explain why the piston rod oscillates in simple harmonic motion. Figure CQ12.13arrow_forward(a) What is the effect on the period of a pendulum if you double its length? (b) What is the effect on the period of a pendulum if you decrease its length by 5.00%?arrow_forward
- An object of mass m1 = 9.00 kg is in equilibrium when connected to a light spring of constant k = 100 N/m that is fastened to a wall as shown in Figure P12.67a. A second object, m2 = 7.00 kg, is slowly pushed up against m1, compressing the spring by the amount A = 0.200 m (see Fig. P12.67b). The system is then released, and both objects start moving to the right on the frictionless surface. (a) When m1 reaches the equilibrium point, m2 loses contact with m1 (see Fig. P12.67c) and moves to the right with speed v. Determine the value of v. (b) How far apart are the objects when the spring is fully stretched for the first time (the distance D in Fig. P12.67d)? Figure P12.67arrow_forwardA point on the edge of a childs pinwheel is in uniform circular motion as the wheel spins counterclockwise with a frequency of 1.53 Hz. The point is at the location x = 30.00 cm and y = 0 when a stopwatch is started to track the motion (Fig. P16.15). a. What is the period of the circular motion? b. What is the velocity of the point at the instant described? c. What is the acceleration of the point at the instant described? FIGURE P16.15 Problems 15 and 16.arrow_forwardWe do not need the analogy in Equation 16.30 to write expressions for the translational displacement of a pendulum bob along the circular arc s(t), translational speed v(t), and translational acceleration a(t). Show that they are given by s(t) = smax cos (smpt + ) v(t) = vmax sin (smpt + ) a(t) = amax cos(smpt + ) respectively, where smax = max with being the length of the pendulum, vmax = smax smp, and amax = smax smp2.arrow_forward
- Consider the simplified single-piston engine in Figure CQ15.13. Assuming the wheel rotates with constant angular speed, explain why the piston rod oscillates in simple harmonic motion.arrow_forwardA spherical bob of mass m and radius R is suspended from a fixed point by a rigid rod of negligible mass whose length from the point of support to the center of the bob is L (Fig. P16.75). Find the period of small oscillation. N The frequency of a physical pendulum comprising a nonuniform rod of mass 1.25 kg pivoted at one end is observed to be 0.667 Hz. The center of mass of the rod is 40.0 cm below the pivot point. What is the rotational inertia of the pendulum around its pivot point?arrow_forwardA restaurant manager has decorated his retro diner by hanging (scratched) vinyl LP records from thin wires. The records have a mass of 180 g, a diameter of 12 in., and negligible thickness. The records oscillate as torsion pendulums. a. Records hung from a small hole near their rims have a period of roughly 3.5 s (Fig. P16.41A). What is the torsion spring constant of the wire? b. If a record is hung from its center hole using a wire of the same torsion spring constant (Fig. P16.41B), what is its period of oscillation? FIGURE P16.41arrow_forward
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