The center of oscillation of a physical pendulum has this interesting property: It an impulse (assumed horizontal and in the plane of oscillation) acts at the center of oscillation, no oscillations are felt at the point of support. Baseball players (and players of many other sports) know that unless the ball hits the bat at this point (called the “sweet spot” by athletes), the oscillations due to the impact will sting their hands. To prove this property, let the stick in Fig. 15-I3 a simulate a baseball bat. Suppose that a horizontal force F → (due to impact with the ball) acts toward the right at P , the center of oscillation. The batter is assumed to hold the bat at O , the pivot point of the stick, (a) What acceleration does the point O undergo as a result of F → ? (b) What angular acceleration is produced by F → about the center of mass of the stick? (c) As a result of the angular acceleration in (b), what linear acceleration does point O undergo? (d) Considering the magnitudes and directions of the accelerations in (a) and (c), convince yourself that P is indeed the “sweet spot.”
The center of oscillation of a physical pendulum has this interesting property: It an impulse (assumed horizontal and in the plane of oscillation) acts at the center of oscillation, no oscillations are felt at the point of support. Baseball players (and players of many other sports) know that unless the ball hits the bat at this point (called the “sweet spot” by athletes), the oscillations due to the impact will sting their hands. To prove this property, let the stick in Fig. 15-I3 a simulate a baseball bat. Suppose that a horizontal force F → (due to impact with the ball) acts toward the right at P , the center of oscillation. The batter is assumed to hold the bat at O , the pivot point of the stick, (a) What acceleration does the point O undergo as a result of F → ? (b) What angular acceleration is produced by F → about the center of mass of the stick? (c) As a result of the angular acceleration in (b), what linear acceleration does point O undergo? (d) Considering the magnitudes and directions of the accelerations in (a) and (c), convince yourself that P is indeed the “sweet spot.”
The center of oscillation of a physical pendulum has this interesting property: It an impulse (assumed horizontal and in the plane of oscillation) acts at the center of oscillation, no oscillations are felt at the point of support. Baseball players (and players of many other sports) know that unless the ball hits the bat at this point (called the “sweet spot” by athletes), the oscillations due to the impact will sting their hands. To prove this property, let the stick in Fig. 15-I3a simulate a baseball bat. Suppose that a horizontal force
F
→
(due to impact with the ball) acts toward the right at P, the center of oscillation. The batter is assumed to hold the bat at O, the pivot point of the stick, (a) What acceleration does the point O undergo as a result of
F
→
? (b) What angular acceleration is produced by
F
→
about the center of mass of the stick? (c) As a result of the angular acceleration in (b), what linear acceleration does point O undergo? (d) Considering the magnitudes and directions of the accelerations in (a) and (c), convince yourself that P is indeed the “sweet spot.”
Study of body parts and their functions. In this combined field of study, anatomy refers to studying the body structure of organisms, whereas physiology refers to their function.
Part C
Find the height yi
from which the rock was launched.
Express your answer in meters to three significant figures.
Learning Goal:
To practice Problem-Solving Strategy 4.1 for projectile motion problems.
A rock thrown with speed 12.0 m/s and launch angle 30.0 ∘ (above the horizontal) travels a horizontal distance of d = 19.0 m before hitting the ground. From what height was the rock thrown? Use the value g = 9.800 m/s2 for the free-fall acceleration.
PROBLEM-SOLVING STRATEGY 4.1 Projectile motion problems
MODEL: Is it reasonable to ignore air resistance? If so, use the projectile motion model.
VISUALIZE: Establish a coordinate system with the x-axis horizontal and the y-axis vertical. Define symbols and identify what the problem is trying to find. For a launch at angle θ, the initial velocity components are vix=v0cosθ and viy=v0sinθ.
SOLVE: The acceleration is known: ax=0 and ay=−g. Thus, the problem becomes one of…
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