
FUNDAMENTALS OF PHYSICS (LLF)+WILEYPLUS
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781119459132
Author: Halliday
Publisher: WILEY
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 15, Problem 31P
ILW A 5.00 kg object on a horizontal frictionless surface is attached to a spring with k = 1000 N/m. The object is displaced from equilibrium 50.0 cm horizontally and given an initial velocity of 10.0 m/s back toward the equilibrium position. What are (a) the motion’s frequency, (b) the initial potential energy of the block–spring system, (c) the initial kinetic energy, and (d) the motion’s amplitude?
Expert Solution & Answer

Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solution
Students have asked these similar questions
1. A 3.5 kg object travelling south at a speed of 5.6 m/s hits a 2.4 kg object travelling north at a speed of 4.3
m/s, the objects do not stick together. Find the velocities of each other after collision if it is elastic and head-on.
pls help
No chatgpt pls will upvote Already got wrong chatgpt answer
Chapter 15 Solutions
FUNDAMENTALS OF PHYSICS (LLF)+WILEYPLUS
Ch. 15 - Which of the following describe for the SHM of...Ch. 15 - The velocity vt of a particle undergoing SHM is...Ch. 15 - The acceleration at of a particle undergoing SHM...Ch. 15 - Which of the following relationships between the...Ch. 15 - You are to complete Fig. 15-22a so that it is a...Ch. 15 - You are to complete Fig. 15-23a so that it is a...Ch. 15 - Figure 15-24 shows the xt curves for three...Ch. 15 - Figure 15-25 shows plots of the kinetic energy K...Ch. 15 - Figure 15-26 shows three physical pendulums...Ch. 15 - You are to build the oscillation transfer device...
Ch. 15 - In Fig. 15-28, a springblock system is put into...Ch. 15 - Figure 15-29 gives, for three situations, the...Ch. 15 - An object undergoing simple harmonic motion takes...Ch. 15 - A 0.12 kg body undergoes simple harmonic motion of...Ch. 15 - What is the maximum acceleration of a platform...Ch. 15 - An automobile can be considered to be mounted on...Ch. 15 - SSM In an electric shaver, the blade moves back...Ch. 15 - A particle with a mass of 1.00 1020 kg is...Ch. 15 - SSM A loudspeaker produces a musical sound by...Ch. 15 - What is the phase constant for the harmonic...Ch. 15 - The position function x = 6.0 m cos3 rad/st /3...Ch. 15 - An oscillating blockspring system takes 0.75 s to...Ch. 15 - In Fig. 15-31, two identical springs of spring...Ch. 15 - What is the phase constant for the harmonic...Ch. 15 - SSM An oscillator consists of a block of mass...Ch. 15 - A simple harmonic oscillator consists of a block...Ch. 15 - SSM Two particles oscillate in simple harmonic...Ch. 15 - Two particles execute simple harmonic motion of...Ch. 15 - ILW An oscillator consists of a block attached to...Ch. 15 - GO At a certain harbor, the tides cause the ocean...Ch. 15 - A block rides on a piston a squat cylindrical...Ch. 15 - GO Figure 15-33a is a partial graph of the...Ch. 15 - ILW In Fig. 15-31, two springs are attached to a...Ch. 15 - GO Figure 15-34 shows block 1 of mass 0.200 kg...Ch. 15 - SSM WWW A block is on a horizontal surface a shake...Ch. 15 - In Fig. 15-35, two springs are joined and...Ch. 15 - GO In Fig. 15-36, a block weighing 14.0 N, which...Ch. 15 - GO In Fig. 15-37, two blocks m = 1.8 kg and M = 10...Ch. 15 - SSM When the displacement in SHM is one-half the...Ch. 15 - Figure 15-38 gives the one-dimensional potential...Ch. 15 - SSM Find the mechanical energy of a blockspring...Ch. 15 - An oscillating blockspring system has a mechanical...Ch. 15 - ILW A 5.00 kg object on a horizontal frictionless...Ch. 15 - Figure 15-39 shows the kinetic energy K of a...Ch. 15 - GO A block of mass M = 5.4 kg, at rest on a...Ch. 15 - GO In Fig. 15-41, block 2 of mass 2.0 kg...Ch. 15 - A 10 g particle undergoes SHM with an amplitude of...Ch. 15 - If the phase angle for a blockspring system in SHM...Ch. 15 - GO A massless spring hangs from the ceiling with a...Ch. 15 - A 95 kg solid sphere with a 15 cm radius is...Ch. 15 - SSM WWW The balance wheel of an old-fashioned...Ch. 15 - ILW A physical pendulum consists of a meter stick...Ch. 15 - SSM In Fig. 15-42, the pendulum consists of a...Ch. 15 - Suppose that a simple pendulum consists of a small...Ch. 15 - a If the physical pendulum of Fig. 15-13 and the...Ch. 15 - A physical pendulum consists of two meter-long...Ch. 15 - A performer seated on a trapeze is swinging back...Ch. 15 - A physical pendulum has a center of oscillation at...Ch. 15 - In Fig. 15-44, a physical pendulum consists of a...Ch. 15 - GO A rectangular block, with face lengths a = 35...Ch. 15 - GO The angle of the pendulum of Fig. 15-11b is...Ch. 15 - Prob. 50PCh. 15 - GO In Fig. 15-46, a stick of length L = 1.85 m...Ch. 15 - GO The 3.00 kg cube in Fig. 15-47 has edge lengths...Ch. 15 - SSM ILW In the overhead view of Fig. 15-48, a long...Ch. 15 - Prob. 54PCh. 15 - GO A pendulum is formed by pivoting a long thin...Ch. 15 - In Fig. 15-50: a 2.50 kg disk of diameter D = 42.0...Ch. 15 - The amplitude of a lightly damped oscillator...Ch. 15 - For the damped oscillator system shown in Fig....Ch. 15 - SSM WWW For the damped oscillator system shown in...Ch. 15 - The suspension system of a 2000 kg automobile sags...Ch. 15 - For Eq. 15-45, suppose the amplitude xm is given...Ch. 15 - Hanging from a horizontal beam are nine simple...Ch. 15 - A. 1000 kg car carrying four 82 kg people travels...Ch. 15 - Although California is known for earthquakes, is...Ch. 15 - A loudspeaker diaphragm is oscillating in simple...Ch. 15 - A uniform spring with k = 8600 N/m is cut into...Ch. 15 - GO In Fig. 15-51, three 10, 000 kg ore cars are...Ch. 15 - A 2.00 kg block hangs from a spring. A 300 g body...Ch. 15 - SSM In the engine of a locomotive, a cylindrical...Ch. 15 - GO A wheel is free to rotate about its fixed axle....Ch. 15 - A 50.0 g stone is attached to the bottom of a...Ch. 15 - A uniform circular disk: whose radius R is 12.6 cm...Ch. 15 - SSM A vertical spring stretches 9.6 cm when a 1.3...Ch. 15 - A massless spring with spring constant 19 N/m...Ch. 15 - A 4.00 kg block is suspended from a spring with k...Ch. 15 - A 55.0 g block oscillates in SHM on the end of a...Ch. 15 - Figure 15-53 gives the position of a 20 g block...Ch. 15 - Figure 15-53 gives the position xt of a block...Ch. 15 - Figure 15-54 shows the kinetic energy K of a...Ch. 15 - A block is in SHM on the end of a spring, with...Ch. 15 - A simple harmonic oscillator consists of a 0.50 kg...Ch. 15 - A simple pendulum of length 20 cm and mass 5.0 g...Ch. 15 - The scale of a spring balance that reads from 0 to...Ch. 15 - A 0.10 kg block oscillates back and forth along a...Ch. 15 - The end point of a spring oscillates with a period...Ch. 15 - The tip of one prong of a tuning fork undergoes...Ch. 15 - Prob. 87PCh. 15 - A block weighing 20 N oscillates at one end of a...Ch. 15 - A 3.0 kg particle is in simple harmonic motion in...Ch. 15 - A particle executes linear SHM with frequency 0.25...Ch. 15 - SSM What is the frequency of a simple pendulum 2.0...Ch. 15 - A grandfather clock has a pendulum that consists...Ch. 15 - A 4.00 kg block hangs from a spring, extending it...Ch. 15 - What is the phase constant for SMH with at given...Ch. 15 - An engineer has an odd-shaped 10 kg object and...Ch. 15 - A spider can tell when its web has captured, say,...Ch. 15 - A torsion pendulum consists of a metal disk with a...Ch. 15 - When a 20 N can is hung from the bottom of a...Ch. 15 - For a simple pendulum, find the angular amplitude...Ch. 15 - In Fig. 15-59, a solid cylinder attached to a...Ch. 15 - SSM A 1.2 kg block sliding on a horizontal...Ch. 15 - A simple harmonic oscillator consists of an 0.80...Ch. 15 - A block sliding on a horizontal frictionless...Ch. 15 - A damped harmonic oscillator consists of a block m...Ch. 15 - A block weighing 10.0 N is attached to the lower...Ch. 15 - A simple harmonic oscillator consists of a block...Ch. 15 - The vibration frequencies of atoms in solids at...Ch. 15 - Figure 15-61 shows that if we hang a block on the...Ch. 15 - The physical pendulum in Fig. 15-62 has two...Ch. 15 - A common device for entertaining a toddler is a...Ch. 15 - A 2.0 kg block executes SHM while attached to a...Ch. 15 - In Fig. 15-64, a 2500 kg demolition ball swings...Ch. 15 - The center of oscillation of a physical pendulum...Ch. 15 - A hypothetical large slingshot is stretched 2.30 m...Ch. 15 - What is the length of a simple pendulum whose full...Ch. 15 - A 2.0 kg block is attached to the end of a spring...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
8. Figure Q23.8 shows two circuits. The two batteries are identical and the four resistors all have exactly the...
College Physics: A Strategic Approach (3rd Edition)
Use the following graph to answer questions 3 and 4. 3. Which of the lines best depicts the log phase of a ther...
Microbiology: An Introduction
Calculate the lattice energy of CaCl2 using a Born-Haber cycle and data from Appendices F and L and Table 7.5. ...
Chemistry & Chemical Reactivity
1. Why is the quantum-mechanical model of the atom important for understanding chemistry?
Chemistry: Structure and Properties (2nd Edition)
3. Is the particle in FIGURE Q1.3 speeding up? Slowing down? Or can you tell? Explain.
FIGURE Q1.3
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: A Strategic Approach, Vol. 1 (Chs 1-21) (4th Edition)
What two components contribute to species diversity? Explain how two communities with the same number of specie...
Campbell Biology (11th 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
- PART III - RESISTORS IN PARALLEL Consider (but do not yet build) the circuit shown in the circuit diagram to the left, which we will call Circuit 3. Make sure you are using Bert bulbs. You may want to wire two batteries in series rather than use a single battery. 7. Predict: a) How will the brightness of bulb B3A compare to the brightness to bulb B3B? c) X E B3A b) How will the brightness of bulb BзA compare to the brightness of bulb B₁ from Circuit 1? How will the currents at points X, Y, and Z be related? www d) How will the current at point X in this circuit compare to the current at point X from Circuit 1? Y Z B3B wwwarrow_forwardPART II - RESISTORS IN SERIES Consider (but do not yet build) the circuit shown in the circuit diagram to the left, which we will call Circuit 2. Make sure you are using Bert bulbs. You may want to wire two batteries in series rather than use a single battery. 4. Predict: a) How will the brightness of bulb B₂ compare to the brighness to bulb B2B? X B2A E Y B2B Ꮓ b) How will the brightness of bulb B2A compare to the brightness of bulb B₁ from Circuit 1? c) How will the currents at points X, Y, and Z be related? d) How will the current at point X in this circuit compare to the current at point X from Circuit 1?arrow_forwardNo chatgpt pls will upvote Already got wrong chatgpt answerarrow_forward
- What is the practical benefit (in terms of time savings and efficiency) of defining the potential energy? Be clear about what is required in terms of calculation if we do not use the concept of potential energy.arrow_forwardWhat is the critical angle fir the light travelling from the crown glass(n=1.52) into the air(n=1.00)?arrow_forwardNo chatgpt pls will upvotearrow_forward
- You are working with a team that is designing a new roller coaster-type amusement park ride for a major theme park. You are present for the testing of the ride, in which an empty 150 kg car is sent along the entire ride. Near the end of the ride, the car is at near rest at the top of a 100 m tall track. It then enters a final section, rolling down an undulating hill to ground level. The total length of track for this final section from the top to the ground is 250 m. For the first 230 m, a constant friction force of 370 N acts from computer-controlled brakes. For the last 20 m, which is horizontal at ground level, the computer increases the friction force to a value required for the speed to be reduced to zero just as the car arrives at the point on the track at which the passengers exit. (a) Determine the required constant friction force (in N) for the last 20 m for the empty test car. Write AK + AU + AE int = W+Q + TMW + TMT + TET + TER for the car-track-Earth system and solve for…arrow_forward= 12 kg, and m3 Three objects with masses m₁ = 3.8 kg, m₂ find the speed of m3 after it moves down 4.0 m. m/s 19 kg, respectively, are attached by strings over frictionless pulleys as indicated in the figure below. The horizontal surface exerts a force of friction of 30 N on m2. If the system is released from rest, use energy concepts to m m2 m3 iarrow_forwardThree objects with masses m₁ = 3.8 kg, m₂ = 12 kg, and m 19 kg, respectively, are attached by strings over frictionless pulleys as indicated in the figure below. The horizontal surface exerts a force of friction of 30 N on m2. If the system is released from rest, use energy concepts to find the speed of m¸ after it moves down 4.0 m. m/s m m2 mgarrow_forward
- In order for Jane to return to base camp, she needs to swing across a river of width D that is filled with alligators. She must swing into a wind exerting constant horizontal force F, F = 110 N, L = 40.0 m, 0 = 50.0°, and her mass to be 50.0 kg. Wind →F Tarzan! Jane (a) with what minimum speed (in m/s) must Jane begin her swing to just make it to the other side? (If Jane can make it across with zero initial velocity, enter 0.) m/s on a vine having length L and initially making an angle with the vertical (see below figure). Take D = 48.0 m, (b) Shortly after Jane's arrival, Tarzan and Jane decide to swing back across the river (simultaneously). With what minimum speed (in m/s) must they begin their swing? Assume that Tarzan has a mass of 80.0 kg. m/sarrow_forwardR=2.00 12V 2.00 4.00 4.002 What is the current in one of the 4.0 Q resistors? An isolated point charge q is located at point X. Two other points Y and Z are such that YZ2 XY. Y X What is (electric field at Y)/(electric field at Z)?arrow_forwardTwo objects (m₁ = 4.75 kg and m₂ 2.80 kg) are connected by a light string passing over a light, frictionless pulley as in the figure below. The 4.75-kg object is released from rest at a point h = 4.00 m above the table mg m (a) Determine the speed of each object when the two pass each other. m/s (b) Determine the speed of each object at the moment the 4.75-kg object hits the table. m/s (c) How much higher does the 2.80-kg object travel after the 4.75-kg object hits the table? marrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage LearningPrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern ...PhysicsISBN:9781337553292Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage Learning
- College PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningClassical Dynamics of Particles and SystemsPhysicsISBN:9780534408961Author:Stephen T. Thornton, Jerry B. MarionPublisher:Cengage LearningCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781305952300Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage Learning

Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...
Physics
ISBN:9781133939146
Author:Katz, Debora M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning

Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning

Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern ...
Physics
ISBN:9781337553292
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning

College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781285737027
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning

Classical Dynamics of Particles and Systems
Physics
ISBN:9780534408961
Author:Stephen T. Thornton, Jerry B. Marion
Publisher:Cengage Learning

College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781305952300
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
SIMPLE HARMONIC MOTION (Physics Animation); Author: EarthPen;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XjkUcJkGd3Y;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY