Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics
4th Edition
ISBN: 9780131495081
Author: Douglas C. Giancoli
Publisher: Addison-Wesley
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 3, Problem 89GP
In hot pursuit, Agent Logan of the FBI must get directly across a 1200-m-wide river in minimum time. The river’s current is 0.80 m/s, he can row a boat at 1.60 m/s, and he can run 3.00 m/s. Describe the path he should take (rowing plus running along the shore) for the minimum crossing time, and determine the minimum time.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
Now let’s apply our definition of average velocity to a swimming competition. During one heat of a swim meet, a swimmer performs the crawl stroke in a pool 50.0 mm long, as shown in (Figure 1). She swims a length at racing speed, taking 24.0 ss to cover the length of the pool. She then takes twice that time to swim casually back to her starting point. Find (a) her average velocity for each length and (b) her average velocity for the entire swim.
c) If the swimmer could cross a 15 kmkm channel maintaining the same average velocity as for the first 50 mm in the pool, how long would it take?
A toy rocket moving vertically upward passes by a 1.8 m-high window whose sill is 7.0 mm above the ground. The rocket takes 0.16 ss to travel the 1.8 mm height of the window.
a) What was the launch speed of the rocket? Assume the propellant is burned very quickly at blastoff.
b) How high will the rocket go?
A river has a steady speed of 0.300 m/s. A student swims upstream a distance of 1.00 km and swims back to the starting point. If the student can swim at a speed of 1.50
m/s in still water, how long does the trip take (swimming up and down in the current)?
If the water were still, by how much would the trip be longer or shorter? (Give a negative answer for a shorter trip.)
Need Help?
Read It
7. -
DETAILS
SERCP8 4.P.005.
PRACTICE ANOTHER
MY NOTES
ASK YOUR TEACHER
A bag of sugar weighs 4.00 lb on Earth. What would it weigh in newtons on the Moon, where the free-fall acceleration is one-sixth that on Earth?
Repeat for Jupiter, where g is 2.64 times that on Earth.
Find the mass of the bag of sugar in kilograms at each of the three locations.
Earth
kg
Moon
kg
Jupiter
kg
Chapter 3 Solutions
Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics
Ch. 3.2 - Under what conditions can the magnitude of the...Ch. 3.2 - If the two vectors of Example 31 are perpendicular...Ch. 3.3 - What does the incorrect vector in Fig. 36c...Ch. 3.8 - Two balls are thrown in the air at different...Ch. 3.8 - The maximum range of a projectile is found to be...Ch. 3 - One car travels due east at 40 km/h. and a second...Ch. 3 - Can you conclude that a car is not accelerating if...Ch. 3 - Can you give several examples of an objects motion...Ch. 3 - Can the displacement vector for a particle moving...Ch. 3 - During baseball practice, a batter hits a very...
Ch. 3 - If V=V1+V2, is V necessarily greater than V1...Ch. 3 - Two vectors have length V1 = 3.5 km and V2 = 4.0...Ch. 3 - Can two vectors, of unequal magnitude, add up to...Ch. 3 - Can the magnitude of a vector ever (a) equal, or...Ch. 3 - Can a particle with constant speed be...Ch. 3 - Does the odometer of a car measure a scalar or a...Ch. 3 - A child wishes to determine the speed a slingshot...Ch. 3 - In archery, should the arrow be aimed directly at...Ch. 3 - A projectile is launched at an upward angle of 30...Ch. 3 - A projectile has the least speed at what point in...Ch. 3 - It was reported in World War I that a pilot flying...Ch. 3 - Two cannonballs, A and B, are fired from the...Ch. 3 - A person sitting in an enclosed train car, moving...Ch. 3 - If you are riding on a train that speeds past...Ch. 3 - Two rowers, who can row at the same speed in still...Ch. 3 - If you stand motionless under an umbrella in a...Ch. 3 - (I) A car is driven 225 km west and then 78 km...Ch. 3 - (I) A delivery truck travels 28 blocks north, 16...Ch. 3 - (I) If x = 7.80 units and Vy = 6.40 units,...Ch. 3 - (II) Graphically determine the resultant of the...Ch. 3 - (II) V is a vector 24.8 units is magnitude and...Ch. 3 - (II) Figure 336 shows two vectors, A and B. whose...Ch. 3 - (II) An airplane is travelling; 835 km/h m a...Ch. 3 - Prob. 8PCh. 3 - (II) (a) Determine the magnitude and direction of...Ch. 3 - (II) Three vectors are shown in Fig, 338. Their...Ch. 3 - (II) (a) Given the vectors A and B shown in Fig....Ch. 3 - (II) Determine the vector AC, given the vectors A...Ch. 3 - (II) For the vectors shown in Fig. 338, determine...Ch. 3 - (II) For the vectors given in Fig. 338, determine...Ch. 3 - (II) The summit of a mountain. 2450 m above base...Ch. 3 - (III) You are given a vector in the xy plane that...Ch. 3 - (I) The position of a particular particle as a...Ch. 3 - (I) What was the average velocity of the particle...Ch. 3 - (II) What is the shape of the path of the particle...Ch. 3 - (II) A car is moving with speed 18.0m/s due south...Ch. 3 - (II) At t = 0, a particle starts from rest at x =...Ch. 3 - (II) (a) A skier is accelerating down a 30.0 hill...Ch. 3 - (II) An ant walks on a piece of graph paper...Ch. 3 - (II) A particle starts from the origin at t = 0...Ch. 3 - (II) Suppose the position of an object is given by...Ch. 3 - (II) An object, which is at the origin at time t =...Ch. 3 - (II) A particles position as a function of time t...Ch. 3 - (I) A tiger leaps horizontally from a 7.5-m-high...Ch. 3 - (I) A diver running 2.3 m/s dives out horizontally...Ch. 3 - (II) Estimate how much farther a person can jump...Ch. 3 - (II) A fire hose held near the ground shoots water...Ch. 3 - (II) A ball is brown horizontally from the roof...Ch. 3 - (II) A football is kicked at ground level with a...Ch. 3 - (II) A ball thrown horizontally at 23.7 m/s from...Ch. 3 - (II) A shot-putter throws the shot (mass = 7.3 kg)...Ch. 3 - (II) Show that the time retired for a projectile...Ch. 3 - (II) You buy a plastic dart gun, and being a...Ch. 3 - (II) A baseball is hit with a speed of 27,0m/s at...Ch. 3 - (II) In Example 311 we chose the x axis to the...Ch. 3 - (II) A grasshopper hops down a level road. On each...Ch. 3 - (II) Extreme-sports enthusiasts have been known to...Ch. 3 - (II) Here is something to try at a sporting event....Ch. 3 - (II) The pilot of an airplane traveling 170km/h...Ch. 3 - (II) (a) A long jumper leaves the ground at 45...Ch. 3 - (II) A high diver leaves the end of a 5.0-m-high...Ch. 3 - (II) A projectile is shot from the edge of a cliff...Ch. 3 - (II) Suppose the kick in Example 3-7 is attempted...Ch. 3 - (II) Exactly 3.0s after a projectile is fired into...Ch. 3 - (II) Revisit Example 39, and assume that the boy...Ch. 3 - (II) A ball is thrown horizontally form the top of...Ch. 3 - (II) A ball is thrown horizontally from the top of...Ch. 3 - (II) At what projection angle will the range of a...Ch. 3 - (II) A projectile is fired with an initial speed...Ch. 3 - (II) An athlete executing a long jump leaves the...Ch. 3 - (III) A person stands at the base of a hill that...Ch. 3 - (III) Derive a formula for the horizontal range R,...Ch. 3 - (I) A person going for a morning jog on the deck...Ch. 3 - (I) Huck Finn walks at a speed of 0.70m/s across...Ch. 3 - (II) Determine the speed of the boat with respect...Ch. 3 - (II) Two planes approach each other head-on. Each...Ch. 3 - (II) A child, who is 45 m from the bank of a...Ch. 3 - (II) A passenger on a boat moving at 1.70 m/s on a...Ch. 3 - (II) A person in the passenger basket of a hot-air...Ch. 3 - (II) An airplane is heading due south at a speed...Ch. 3 - (II) In what direction should the pilot aim the...Ch. 3 - (II) Two cars approach a street corner at right...Ch. 3 - (II) A swimmer is capable of swimming 0.60 m/s in...Ch. 3 - (II) A swimmer is capable of swimming 0.60m/s in...Ch. 3 - (II) A motorboat whose speed in still water is...Ch. 3 - (II) A boat, whose speed in still water is 2.70...Ch. 3 - (III) An airplane, whose air speed is 580 km/h, is...Ch. 3 - Two vectors, V1 and V2, add to a resultant...Ch. 3 - A plumber slops out of his truck, walks 66 m east...Ch. 3 - On mountainous downhill roads escape routes are...Ch. 3 - A light plane is headed due south with a speed...Ch. 3 - An Olympic long jumper is capable of jumping 8.0...Ch. 3 - Romeo is chucking pebbles gently up to Juliets...Ch. 3 - Raindrops make an angle with the vertical when...Ch. 3 - Apollo astronauts took a nine iron to the Moon and...Ch. 3 - A hunter aims directly at a target (on the same...Ch. 3 - The cliff divers of Acapulco push off horizontally...Ch. 3 - When Babe Ruth hit a homer over the 8.0-m-high...Ch. 3 - The speed of a boat in still water is v. The boat...Ch. 3 - At serve, a tennis player aims to hit the ball...Ch. 3 - Spymaster Chris, flying a constant 208 km/h...Ch. 3 - A basketball leaves a players hands at a height of...Ch. 3 - A particle has a velocity of v=(2.0i+3.5tj)m/s....Ch. 3 - A projectile is launched from ground level to the...Ch. 3 - In hot pursuit, Agent Logan of the FBI must get...Ch. 3 - A boat can travel 2.20 m/s in still water, (a) If...Ch. 3 - A boat is traveling where there is a current of...Ch. 3 - A child runs down a 12 hill and suddenly jumps...Ch. 3 - A basketball is shot from an initial height or 2.4...Ch. 3 - You are driving south on a highway at 25 m/s...Ch. 3 - A rok is kicked horizontally at 15 m/s from a hill...Ch. 3 - A batter hits a fly ball which leaves the bat 0.90...Ch. 3 - A ball is shot from the top of a building with an...Ch. 3 - At t = 0 a batter hits a baseball with an initial...Ch. 3 - (II) Students shoot a plastic ball horizontally...Ch. 3 - (III) A shot-putter throws from a height h = 2.1 m...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
3. What is free-fall, and why does it make you weightless? Briefly describe why astronauts are weightless in th...
The Cosmic Perspective (8th Edition)
17. A speed skater moving to the left across frictionless ice at 8.0 m/s hits a 5.0-m-wide patch of rough ice....
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: A Strategic Approach, Vol. 1 (Chs 1-21) (4th Edition)
A superconducting solenoid has 3300 turns per meter and carries 4.1 kA. Find the magnetic field strength in the...
Essential University Physics: Volume 2 (3rd Edition)
15. How do weight and mass differ?
Applied Physics (11th Edition)
Using the definitions in Eqs. 1.1 and 1.4, and appropriate diagrams, show that the dot product and cross produc...
Introduction to Electrodynamics
Explain all answers clearly, with complete sentences and proper essay structure if needed. An asterisk (*) desi...
The Cosmic Perspective Fundamentals (2nd 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
- A hare and a tortoise compete in a race over a course 1.00 km long. The tortoise craws straight and steadily at its maximum speed of 0.200 m/s toward the finish line. The hare runs at its maximum speed 8.00 m/s toward the goal for 0.800 km and then stops to tease the the tortoise. How close to the goal can the hare let the tortoise wins in a photo finish? Assume that, when moving, both animals move steadily at their respective maximum speeds. Pls include figures and fbd.arrow_forwardPerson A jogs east at a speed of 5 meters per second for 3 minutes, then turns north and jogs at 4 meters per second for 5 minutes. (1) what is the jogging speed of person A for the whole duration?arrow_forwardA man drives a motorcycle off a horizontal roof to a neighboring rooftop to another building. The second roof is 6 meters lower and 10 meters away. Ignoring air resistance, how long is the motorcycle in the air? What is the minimum initial speed needed to reach the other building? What direction is the man's velocity point relative to the horizontal roof just before he lands? Assume initial speed found in earlier answer.arrow_forward
- I need help with question d,e,and f.arrow_forwardHobbyists build a compressed air powered cannon which is able to launch a pumpkin a horizontal distance of 2700 ft. Assuming no air resistance, and assuming the pumpkin is launched at ground level, what is the minimum initial speed of the pumpkin (just as it leaves the cannon) that is needed for it to reach this distance, in m/s? 294 X m/sarrow_forwardA man flies a small airplane from Fargo to Bismarck, North Dakota a distance of 180 miles. Because he is flying into --- a head wind, the trip takes him 2 hours. On the way back, the wind is still blowing at the same speed, so the return trip takes only 1 hour 12 minutes. What is his speed in still air, and how fast is the wind blowing? Your answer is his speed equals the wind speed equalsarrow_forward
- A rock thrown upward returns to its starting point. The trip this takes 7 s. If we choose positive coordinate axis downward, what should be the initial velocity of the bullet? Ignore air resistance.arrow_forwardThe runway of an airport in Oman has been designed such that the lowest acceleration for a plane to take off is 10.3 m/s ^ 2 . The take -off speed for this plane will be 64.2 m/s . Assuming this minimum acceleration , then the minimum allowed length (m) for the runway is :arrow_forwardA tourist being chased by an angry bear is running in a straight line toward his car at a speed of 5.11 m/s. The car is a distance d away. The bear is 34.0 m behind the tourist and running at 7.01 m/s. Both the bear and the tourist are running with constant velocity. What is the maximum possible value for d in meters for the tourist reaches the car safely?arrow_forward
- In 1865, Jules Verne proposed sending men to the Moon by firing a space capsule from a 220-m-long cannon with final speed of 10.97 km/s. What would have been the unrealistically large acceleration experienced by the space travelers during their launch? (A human can stand an acceleration of 15g for a short time.)arrow_forwardA passenger arriving in a new town wishes to go from the station to a hotel located 10km away on a straight road from the station. A dishonest cabman takes him along a circuitous path 23 km long and reaches the hotel in 28 min. What is (a) the average speed of the taxi, (b) the magnitude of average velocity? Are the two equal?arrow_forwardA tourist being chased by an angry bear is running in a straight line toward his car at a speed of 3.31 m/s. The car is a distance d away. The bear is 28.1 m behind the tourist and running at 4.06m/s. The tourist reaches the car safely. What is the maximum possible value for d?arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- College PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781305952300Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningUniversity Physics (14th Edition)PhysicsISBN:9780133969290Author:Hugh D. Young, Roger A. FreedmanPublisher:PEARSONIntroduction To Quantum MechanicsPhysicsISBN:9781107189638Author:Griffiths, David J., Schroeter, Darrell F.Publisher:Cambridge University Press
- Physics for Scientists and EngineersPhysicsISBN:9781337553278Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningLecture- Tutorials for Introductory AstronomyPhysicsISBN:9780321820464Author:Edward E. Prather, Tim P. Slater, Jeff P. Adams, Gina BrissendenPublisher:Addison-WesleyCollege Physics: A Strategic Approach (4th Editio...PhysicsISBN:9780134609034Author:Randall D. Knight (Professor Emeritus), Brian Jones, Stuart FieldPublisher:PEARSON
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781305952300
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
University Physics (14th Edition)
Physics
ISBN:9780133969290
Author:Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman
Publisher:PEARSON
Introduction To Quantum Mechanics
Physics
ISBN:9781107189638
Author:Griffiths, David J., Schroeter, Darrell F.
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Physics for Scientists and Engineers
Physics
ISBN:9781337553278
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Lecture- Tutorials for Introductory Astronomy
Physics
ISBN:9780321820464
Author:Edward E. Prather, Tim P. Slater, Jeff P. Adams, Gina Brissenden
Publisher:Addison-Wesley
College Physics: A Strategic Approach (4th Editio...
Physics
ISBN:9780134609034
Author:Randall D. Knight (Professor Emeritus), Brian Jones, Stuart Field
Publisher:PEARSON
Relative Velocity - Basic Introduction; Author: The Organic Chemistry Tutor;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_39hCnqbNXM;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY