Consider the street pattern shown in Fig. 2–47. Each intersection has a traffic signal, and the speed limit is 50 km/ h. Suppose you are driving from the west at the speed limit. When you are 10.0m from the first intersection, all the lights turn green. The lights are green for 13.0 s each. ( a ) Calculate the time needed to reach the third stoplight. Can you make it through all three lights without stopping? ( b ) Another car was stopped at the first light when all the lights turned green. It can accelerate at the rate of 2.00 m/s 2 to the speed limit. Can the second car make it through all three lights without stopping? By how many seconds would it make it or not?
Consider the street pattern shown in Fig. 2–47. Each intersection has a traffic signal, and the speed limit is 50 km/ h. Suppose you are driving from the west at the speed limit. When you are 10.0m from the first intersection, all the lights turn green. The lights are green for 13.0 s each. ( a ) Calculate the time needed to reach the third stoplight. Can you make it through all three lights without stopping? ( b ) Another car was stopped at the first light when all the lights turned green. It can accelerate at the rate of 2.00 m/s 2 to the speed limit. Can the second car make it through all three lights without stopping? By how many seconds would it make it or not?
Consider the street pattern shown in Fig. 2–47. Each intersection has a traffic signal, and the speed limit is 50 km/ h. Suppose you are driving from the west at the speed limit. When you are 10.0m from the first intersection, all the lights turn green. The lights are green for 13.0 s each. (a) Calculate the time needed to reach the third stoplight. Can you make it through all three lights without stopping? (b) Another car was stopped at the first light when all the lights turned green. It can accelerate at the rate of 2.00 m/s2 to the speed limit. Can the second car make it through all three lights without stopping? By how many seconds would it make it or not?
A bobsled starts at the top of a track as human runners sprint from rest and then jump into the sled. Assume they reach 40 km/h from rest after covering a distance of 50 m over flat ice. a. How much work do they do on themselves and the sled which they are pushing given the fact that there are two men of combined mass 185 kg and the sled with a mass of 200 kg? (If you haven't seen bobsledding, watch youtube to understand better what's going on.) b. After this start, the team races down the track and descends vertically by 200 m. At the finish line the sled crosses with a speed of 55 m/s. How much energy was lost to drag and friction along the way down after the men were in the sled?
For what type of force is it not possible to define a potential energy expression?
10. Imagine you have a system in which you have 54 grams of ice. You can melt this
ice and then vaporize it all at 0 C. The melting and vaporization are done reversibly
into a balloon held at a pressure of 0.250 bar. Here are some facts about water you
may wish to know. The density of liquid water at 0 C is 1 g/cm³. The density of ice at 0
C is 0.917 g/cm³. The enthalpy of vaporization of liquid water is 2.496 kJ/gram and the
enthalpy of fusion of solid water is 333.55 J/gram.
Chapter 2 Solutions
Physics for Science and Engineering With Modern Physics, VI - Student Study Guide
Human Physiology: An Integrated Approach (8th Edition)
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