We've seen that a man's higher initial acceleration means that a man can outrun a horse over a very short race. A simple—but plausible—model for a sprint by a man and a horse uses the following assumptions: The man accelerates at 6.0 m/s 2 for 1.8 s and then runs at a constant speed. A horse accelerates at a more modest 5.0 m/s 2 but continues accelerating for 4.8 s and then continues at a constant speed. A man and a horse are competing in a 200 m race. The man is given a 100 m head start, so he begins 100 m from the finish line. How much time does the man take to complete the race? How much time does the horse take? Who wins the race?
We've seen that a man's higher initial acceleration means that a man can outrun a horse over a very short race. A simple—but plausible—model for a sprint by a man and a horse uses the following assumptions: The man accelerates at 6.0 m/s 2 for 1.8 s and then runs at a constant speed. A horse accelerates at a more modest 5.0 m/s 2 but continues accelerating for 4.8 s and then continues at a constant speed. A man and a horse are competing in a 200 m race. The man is given a 100 m head start, so he begins 100 m from the finish line. How much time does the man take to complete the race? How much time does the horse take? Who wins the race?
We've seen that a man's higher initial acceleration means that a man can outrun a horse over a very short race. A simple—but plausible—model for a sprint by a man and a horse uses the following assumptions: The man accelerates at 6.0 m/s2 for 1.8 s and then runs at a constant speed. A horse accelerates at a more modest 5.0 m/s2 but continues accelerating for 4.8 s and then continues at a constant speed. A man and a horse are competing in a 200 m race. The man is given a 100 m head start, so he begins 100 m from the finish line. How much time does the man take to complete the race? How much time does the horse take? Who wins the race?
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Silver/
silver oxide
Zinc
zinc/oxide
Car P moves to the west with constant speed v0 along a straight road. Car Q starts from rest at instant 1, and moves to the west with increasing speed. At instant 5, car Q has speed w0 relative to the road (w0 < v0). Instants 1-5 are separated by equal time intervals. At instant 3, cars P and Q are adjacent to one another (i.e., they have the same position). In the reference frame o f the road, at instant 3 i s the speed o f car Q greater than, less than, or equal to the speed of car P? Explain.
Car P moves to the west with constant speed v0 along a straight road. Car Q starts from rest at instant 1, and moves to the west with increasing speed. At instant 5, car Q has speed w0 relative to the road (w0 < v0). Instants 1-5 are separated by equal time intervals.
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