MASTERINGPHYSICS W/ETEXT ACCESS CODE 6
13th Edition
ISBN: 9781269542661
Author: YOUNG
Publisher: PEARSON C
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Textbook Question
Chapter 16, Problem 16.5DQ
Symphonic musicians always “warm up” their wind instruments by blowing into them before a performance. What purpose does this serve?
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Students have asked these similar questions
need help with the first part
A ball is thrown with an initial speed v, at an angle 6, with the horizontal. The horizontal range of the ball is R, and the ball reaches a maximum height R/4. In terms of R and g, find the following.
(a) the time interval during which the ball is in motion
2R
(b) the ball's speed at the peak of its path
v=
Rg 2
√ sin 26, V 3
(c) the initial vertical component of its velocity
Rg
sin ei
sin 20
(d) its initial speed
Rg
√ sin 20
×
(e) the angle 6, expressed in terms of arctan of a fraction.
1
(f) Suppose the ball is thrown at the same initial speed found in (d) but at the angle appropriate for reaching the greatest height that it can. Find this height.
hmax
R2
(g) Suppose the ball is thrown at the same initial speed but at the angle for greatest possible range. Find this maximum horizontal range.
Xmax
R√3
2
An outfielder throws a baseball to his catcher in an attempt to throw out a runner at home plate. The ball bounces once before reaching the catcher. Assume the angle at which the bounced ball leaves the ground is the same as the angle at which the outfielder threw it as shown in the figure, but that the ball's speed after the bounce is one-half of what it was before the bounce.
8
(a) Assuming the ball is always thrown with the same initial speed, at what angle & should the fielder throw the ball to make it go the same distance D with one bounce (blue path) as a ball thrown upward at 35.0° with no bounce (green path)?
24
(b) Determine the ratio of the time interval for the one-bounce throw to the flight time for the no-bounce throw.
Cone-bounce
no-bounce
0.940
Chapter 16 Solutions
MASTERINGPHYSICS W/ETEXT ACCESS CODE 6
Ch. 16.1 - You use an electronic signal generator to produce...Ch. 16.2 - Mercury is 13.6 times denser than water. Based on...Ch. 16.3 - Prob. 16.3TYUCh. 16.4 - If you connect a hose to one end of a metal pipe...Ch. 16.5 - A stopped organ pipe of length L has a fundamental...Ch. 16.6 - Suppose that speaker A in Fig. 16.23 emits a...Ch. 16.7 - One tuning fork vibrates at 440 Hz, while a second...Ch. 16.8 - You are at an outdoor concert with a wind blowing...Ch. 16.9 - What would you hear if you were directly behind...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.1DQ
Ch. 16 - The hero of a western movie listens for an...Ch. 16 - Would you expect the pitch (or frequency) of an...Ch. 16 - In most modern wind instruments the pitch is...Ch. 16 - Symphonic musicians always warm up their wind...Ch. 16 - In a popular and amusing science demonstration, a...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.7DQCh. 16 - (a) Does a sound level of 0 dB mean that there is...Ch. 16 - Which has a more direct influence on the loudness...Ch. 16 - If the pressure amplitude of a sound wave is...Ch. 16 - Does the sound intensity level obey the...Ch. 16 - A small fraction of the energy in a sound wave is...Ch. 16 - A small metal band is slipped onto one of the...Ch. 16 - An organist in a cathedral plays a loud chord and...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.15DQCh. 16 - Two vibrating tuning forks have identical...Ch. 16 - A large church has part of the organ in the front...Ch. 16 - A sound source and a listener are both at rest on...Ch. 16 - Can you think of circumstances in which a Doppler...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.20DQCh. 16 - If you wait at a railroad crossing as a train...Ch. 16 - In case 1, a source of sound approaches a...Ch. 16 - Does an aircraft make a sonic boom only at the...Ch. 16 - If you are riding in a supersonic aircraft, what...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.25DQCh. 16 - Example 16.1 (Section 16.1) showed that for sound...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.2ECh. 16 - Consider a sound wave in air that has displacement...Ch. 16 - A loud factory machine produces sound having a...Ch. 16 - BIO Ultrasound and Infrasound. (a) Whale...Ch. 16 - (a) In a liquid with density 1300 kg/m3,...Ch. 16 - A submerged scuba diver hears the sound of a boat...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.8ECh. 16 - An oscillator vibrating at 1250 Hz produces a...Ch. 16 - CALC (a) Show that the fractional change in the...Ch. 16 - A 60.0-m-long brass rod is struck at one end. A...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.12ECh. 16 - BIO Energy Delivered to the Ear. Sound is detected...Ch. 16 - (a) By what factor must the sound intensity be...Ch. 16 - Eavesdropping! You are trying to overhear a juicy...Ch. 16 - BIO Human Hearing. A fan at a rock concert is 30 m...Ch. 16 - A sound wave in air at 20C has a frequency of 320...Ch. 16 - You live on a busy street, but as a music lover,...Ch. 16 - BIO For a person with normal hearing, the faintest...Ch. 16 - The intensity due to a number of independent sound...Ch. 16 - CP A babys mouth is 30 cm from her fathers ear and...Ch. 16 - The Sacramento City Council adopted a law to...Ch. 16 - CP At point A, 3.0 m from a small source of sound...Ch. 16 - (a) If two sounds differ by 5.00 dB, find the...Ch. 16 - Standing sound waves are produced in a pipe that...Ch. 16 - The fundamental frequency of a pipe that is open...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.27ECh. 16 - BIO The Vocal Tract. Many opera singers (and some...Ch. 16 - The longest pipe found in most medium-size pipe...Ch. 16 - Singing in the Shower. A pipe closed at both ends...Ch. 16 - You blow across the open mouth of an empty test...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.32ECh. 16 - A 75.0-cm-long wire of mass 5.625 g is tied at...Ch. 16 - Small speakers A and B are driven in phase at 725...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.35ECh. 16 - Two loudspeakers, A and B (see Fig. E16.35), are...Ch. 16 - Two loudspeakers, A and B, are driven by the same...Ch. 16 - Two loudspeakers, A and B, are driven by the same...Ch. 16 - Two small stereo speakers are driven in step by...Ch. 16 - Two guitarists attempt to play the same note of...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.41ECh. 16 - Adjusting Airplane Motors. The motors that drive...Ch. 16 - Two organ pipes, open at one end but closed at the...Ch. 16 - In Example 16.18 (Section 16.8), suppose the...Ch. 16 - On the planet Arrakis a male ornithoid is flying...Ch. 16 - A railroad train is traveling at 25.0 m/s in still...Ch. 16 - Two train whistles, A and B, each have a frequency...Ch. 16 - Moving Source vs. Moving Listener. (a) A sound...Ch. 16 - A swimming duck puddles the water with its feet...Ch. 16 - A railroad train is traveling at 30.0 m/s in still...Ch. 16 - A car alarm is emitting sound waves of frequency...Ch. 16 - While sitting in your car by the side of a country...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.53ECh. 16 - The siren of a fire engine that is driving...Ch. 16 - A stationary police car emits a sound of frequency...Ch. 16 - How fast (as a percentage of light speed) would a...Ch. 16 - A jet plane flies overhead at Mach 1.70 and at a...Ch. 16 - The shock-wave cone created by a space shuttle at...Ch. 16 - A soprano and a bass are singing a duet. While the...Ch. 16 - CP The sound from a trumpet radiates uniformly in...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.61PCh. 16 - CP A uniform 165-N bar is supported horizontally...Ch. 16 - An organ pipe has two successive harmonics with...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.64PCh. 16 - Prob. 16.65PCh. 16 - A bat flies toward a wall, emitting a steady sound...Ch. 16 - The sound source of a ships sonar system operates...Ch. 16 - BIO Ultrasound in Medicine. A 2.00-MHZ sound wave...Ch. 16 - BIO Horseshoe bats (genus Rhinolophus) emit sounds...Ch. 16 - CP A police siren of frequency fsiren is attached...Ch. 16 - CP A turntable 1.50 m in diameter rotates at 75...Ch. 16 - DATA A long, closed cylindrical tank contains a...Ch. 16 - Prob. 16.73PCh. 16 - DATA Supernova! (a) Equation (16.30) can be...Ch. 16 - CALC Figure P16.75 shows the pressure fluctuation...Ch. 16 - CP Longitudinal Waves on a Spring. A long spring...Ch. 16 - BIO ULTRASOUND IMAGING. A typical ultrasound...Ch. 16 - BIO ULTRASOUND IMAGING. A typical ultrasound...Ch. 16 - BIO ULTRASOUND IMAGING. A typical ultrasound...Ch. 16 - BIO ULTRASOUND IMAGING. A typical ultrasound...Ch. 16 - BIO ULTRASOUND IMAGING. A typical ultrasound...
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