College Physics
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9780134601823
Author: ETKINA, Eugenia, Planinšič, G. (gorazd), Van Heuvelen, Alan
Publisher: Pearson,
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Chapter 3, Problem 31P
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College Physics
Ch. 3 - Review Question 3.1 How do we determine how many...Ch. 3 - Review Question 3.2 A book bag hanging from a...Ch. 3 - Review Question 3.3 An elevator in a tall office...Ch. 3 - Review Question 3.4 What is the main difference...Ch. 3 - Review Question 3.5 Your friend says that m is a...Ch. 3 - Review Question 3.6 Newton’s second law says that...Ch. 3 - Review Question 3.7 Three friends argue about the...Ch. 3 - Review Question 3.8 Is the following sentence...Ch. 3 - Review Question 3.9 Explain how an air bag and...Ch. 3 - An upward-moving elevator slows to a stop as it...
Ch. 3 - You apply the brakes of your car abruptly and your...Ch. 3 - Which of the statements below explains why a child...Ch. 3 - Which observers can explain the phenomenon of...Ch. 3 - 5. Which vector quantities describing a moving...Ch. 3 - You have probably observed that magnets attract...Ch. 3 - Which of the following velocity-versus-time graphs...Ch. 3 - A book sits on a tabletop. What force is the...Ch. 3 - 9. A spaceship moves in outer space. What happens...Ch. 3 - 10. A 0.10-kg apple falls on Earth, whose mass is...Ch. 3 - 11. A man stands on a scale and holds a heavy...Ch. 3 - You stand on a bathroom scale in a moving...Ch. 3 - A person pushes a 10-kg crate, exerting a 200-N...Ch. 3 - Two small balls of the same material, one of mass...Ch. 3 - 15. A box full of lead and a box of the same size...Ch. 3 -
16. Figure Q3.16 shows an unlabeled force...Ch. 3 - A person jumps from a wall and lands stiff-legged....Ch. 3 - A 3000-kg spaceship is moving away from a space...Ch. 3 - Figure Q3.19 is a velocity-versus-time graph for...Ch. 3 - 20. Explain the purpose of crumple zones, that is,...Ch. 3 - 21. Explain why when landing on a firm surface...Ch. 3 - A small car bumps into a large truck. Compare the...Ch. 3 - 23. You are pulling a sled. Compare the forces...Ch. 3 - 25. You are holding a 100-g apple. (a) What is the...Ch. 3 - 26. You throw a 100-g apple upward. (a) While the...Ch. 3 - After having been thrown upward, a 100-g apple...Ch. 3 - * In Figure P3.1 you see unlabeled force diagrams...Ch. 3 - 2. Draw a force diagram (a) for a bag hanging at...Ch. 3 - 3. For each of the following situations, draw the...Ch. 3 - 4. You hang a book bag on a spring scale and place...Ch. 3 - 5. A block of dry ice slides at constant velocity...Ch. 3 - 6. * You throw a ball upward. (a) Draw a motion...Ch. 3 - 7. A string pulls horizontally on a cart so that...Ch. 3 - 8. * Solving the previous problem, your friend...Ch. 3 - 9. * A string pulls horizontally on a cart so that...Ch. 3 - A block of dry ice slides at a constant velocity...Ch. 3 - 11 .Three motion diagrams for a moving elevator...Ch. 3 - 12. * A student holds a thin aluminum pie pan...Ch. 3 - * Figures P3.11a b, and c show three motion...Ch. 3 - 14. * A train traveling from New York to...Ch. 3 - *Explain the phenomenon of whiplash from two...Ch. 3 - An astronaut exerts a 100-N force pushing a beam...Ch. 3 - 17. Four people participate in a rope competition....Ch. 3 - 18. * Shot put throw During a practice shot put...Ch. 3 - * You know the sum of the forces F exerted on an...Ch. 3 - * You record the displacement of an object as a...Ch. 3 - 25. * Spider-Man Spider-Man holds the bottom of an...Ch. 3 - ** Matt is wearing Rollerblades. Beth pushes him...Ch. 3 - 27. * Stuntwoman The downward acceleration of a...Ch. 3 - EST Estimate the average force that a baseball...Ch. 3 - * Super Hornet jet takeoff A2.1104-kgF-18 Super...Ch. 3 - Lunar Lander The Lunar Lander of mass 2.01024 kg...Ch. 3 - 31. Aisha throws a ball upward Frances, standing...Ch. 3 - Students Lucia. Isabel, and Austin are...Ch. 3 - 33. * Astronaut Karen Nyberg, a 60-kg astronaut,...Ch. 3 - * A 0.10-kg apple falls off a tree branch that is...Ch. 3 - 35. ** An 80-kg fireman slides 5.0 m down a fire...Ch. 3 - * Earth exerts a 1.0-N gravitational force on an...Ch. 3 - * You push a bowling ball down the lane toward the...Ch. 3 - 38. * EST (a) A 50-kg skater initially at rest...Ch. 3 - 39. ** EST Basketball player LeBron James can jump...Ch. 3 - * EST The Scottish Tug of War Association contests...Ch. 3 - Consider the experiment described in Question 3.6...Ch. 3 - 42. * EST A friend drops a 0.625-kg basketball...Ch. 3 - 43 Car safety The National Transportation Safety...Ch. 3 - 44. * A 70-kg person in a moving car stops during...Ch. 3 - BIOESTLeft ventricle pumpingThe lower left chamber...Ch. 3 - Prob. 46GPCh. 3 - 47. ** EST Olympic dive During a practice dive,...Ch. 3 - 49. ** EST You are doing squats on a bathroom...Ch. 3 - ** EST Estimate the horizontal speed of the runner...Ch. 3 - 51. ** EST Estimate the maximum acceleration of...Ch. 3 - ** EST Estimate how much Earth would move during...Ch. 3 - In an early practice run while the rocket sled was...Ch. 3 - What is Stapps67m/sspeed in miles per hour? 30mi/h...Ch. 3 - 55. What is the magnitude of the acceleration of...Ch. 3 - 56. What is the magnitude of the acceleration of...Ch. 3 - What is the average force exerted by the...Ch. 3 - 58. What is the time interval for Stapp and his...Ch. 3 - Using proportions A proportion is defined as an...Ch. 3 - Using proportions A proportion is defined as an...Ch. 3 - Using proportions A proportion is defined as an...Ch. 3 - Using proportions A proportion is defined as an...Ch. 3 - Using proportions A proportion is defined as an...
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- Two teams of nine members each engage in tug-of-war. Each of the first team’s members has an average mass of 68 kg and exerts an average force of 1350 N horizontally. Each of the second team’s members has an average mass of 73 kg and exerts an average force of 1365 N horizontally. (a) What is magnitude of the acceleration of the two teams, and which team sins? (b) What is the tension in the section of rope between the teams?arrow_forwardTwo objects are connected by a light string that passes over a frictionless pulley as shown in Figure P4.30. Assume the incline is frictionless and take m1 = 2.00 kg, m2 = 6.00 kg, and = 55.0. (a) Draw free-body diagrams of both objects. Find (b) the magnitude of the acceleration of the objects, (c) the tension in the string, and (d) the speed of each object 2.00 s after it is released from rest. Figure P4.30arrow_forwardAn object experiences no acceleration. Which of the following cannot be true for the object? (a) A single force acts on the object. (b) No forces act on the object. (c) Forces act on the object, but the forces cancel.arrow_forward
- A block of mass m1= 10 kg is on a frictionless table to the left of a second block of mass m2 = 24 kg, attached by a horizontal string (Figure WU4.13). If a horizontal force of 120 N is exerted on the block m2in the positive x-direction, (a) use the system approach to find the acceleration of the two blocks. (b) What is the tension in the string connecting the blocks? (See Section 4.6.) Figure WU4.13arrow_forwardIn Figure P4.35, the man and the platform together weigh 950 N. The pulley can be modeled as frictionless. Determine how hard the man has to pull on the rope to lift himself steadily upward above the ground. (Or is it impossible? If so, explain why.) Figure P4.35arrow_forwardAn object of mass m1 = 5.00 kg placed on a frictionless, horizontal table is connected to a string that passes over a pulley and then is fastened to a hanging object of mass m2 = 9.00 kg as shown in Figure P4.28. (a) Draw free-body diagrams of both objects. Find (b) the magnitude of the acceleration of the objects and (c) the tension in the string. Figure P4.28arrow_forward
- On June 25, 1983, shot-putter Udo Beyer of East Germany threw the 7.26-kg shot 22.22 m, which at that time was a world record. (a) If the shot was released at a height of 2.20 m with a projection angle of 45.00, what was its initial velocity? (b) If while in Beyer’s hand the shot was accelerated uniformly over a distance of 1.20 m, what was the net force on it?arrow_forwardA 1 00-kg car is pulling a 300-kg trailer. Together, the car and trailer move forward with an acceleration of 2.15 m/s2. Ignore any force of air drag on the car and all friction forces on the trailer. Determine (a) the net force on the car, (b) the net force on the trailer, (c) the force exerted by the trailer on the car, and (d) the resultant force exerted by the car on the road.arrow_forwardA 1 000-kg car is pulling a 300-kg trailer. Together, the car and trailer move forward with an acceleration of 2.15 m/s2. Ignore any force of air drag on the car and all frictional forces on the trailer. Determine (a) the net force on the car, (b) the net force on the trailer, (c) the force exerted by the trailer on the car, and (d) the resultant force exerted by the car on the road.arrow_forward
- Three objects are connected on a table as shown in Figure P5.14. The coefficient of kinetic friction between the block of mass m2 and the table is 0.350. The objects have masses of m1 = 4.00 kg, m2 = 1.00 kg, and m3 = 2.00 kg, and the pulleys are frictionless. (a) Draw a free-body diagram of each object. (b) Determine the acceleration of each object, including its direction. (c) Determine the tensions in the two cords. What If? (d) If the tabletop were smooth, would the tensions increase, decrease, or remain the same? Explain. Figure P5.14arrow_forwardA rope with mass m, is attached to a block with mass mb, as in Figure P4.72. Both the rope and the block rest on a horizontal, frictionless surface. The rope does not stretch. The free end of the rope is pulled to the right with a horizontal force F. (a) Draw free-body diagrams for the rope and the block, noting that the tension in the rope is not uniform, (b) Find the acceleration of the system in terms of mb, mT, and F. (c) Find the magnitude of the force the rope exerts on the block, (d) What happens to the force on the block as the ropes mass approaches zero? What can you state about the tension in a light cord joining a pair of moving objects? Figure P4.72arrow_forwardFigure 4.39 shows Superhero and Trusty Sidekick hanging motionless from a rope. Superhero's mass is 90.0 kg, while Trusty Sidekick's is 55.0 kg, and the mass of the rope is negligible. (a) Draw a free-body diagram of the situation showing all forces acting on Superhero, Trusty Sidekick, and the rope. (b) Find the tension in the rope above Superhero. (c) Find the tension in the rope between Superhero and Trusty Sidekick. Indicate on your free-body diagram the system of interest used to solve each part. Figure 4.39 Superhero and Trusty Sidekick hang motionless on a rope as they try to figure out what to do next. Will the tension be the same everywhere in the rope?arrow_forward
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