FUND PHYS 10TH EXT WILEY PLUS
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781119500100
Author: Halliday
Publisher: MCGRAW-HILL HIGHER EDUCATION
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Question
Chapter 4, Problem 11P
To determine
To find:
(a) Displacement vector at 2.0 sec
(b) Velocity vector at 2 sec
(c) Acceleration vector at 2 sec
(d) Direction
Expert Solution & Answer

Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solution
Students have asked these similar questions
Three charged particles are located at the corners of an equilateral triangle as shown in the figure below (let q = 1.00 μC, and L = 0.850 m). Calculate the total electric force on the 7.00-μC charge.
magnitude
direction
N
° (counterclockwise from the +x axis)
y
7.00 με
9
L
60.0°
x
-4.00 μC ①
(a) Calculate the number of electrons in a small, electrically neutral silver pin that has a mass of 9.0 g. Silver has 47 electrons per atom, and its molar mass is 107.87 g/mol.
(b) Imagine adding electrons to the pin until the negative charge has the very large value 1.00 mC. How many electrons are added for every 109 electrons already present?
(a) A physics lab instructor is working on a new demonstration. She attaches two identical copper spheres with mass m = 0.180 g to cords of length L as shown in the figure.
A
Both spheres have the same charge of 6.80 nC, and are in static equilibrium when 0 = 4.95°. What is L (in m)? Assume the cords are massless.
0.180
Draw a free-body diagram, apply Newton's second law for a particle in equilibrium to one of the spheres. Find an equation for the distance between the two spheres in terms of L and 0, and use this expression in your
Coulomb force equation. m
(b) What If? The charge on both spheres is increased until each cord makes an angle of 0 = 9.90° with the vertical. If both spheres have the same electric charge, what is the charge (in nC) on each sphere in this case?
9.60
Use the same reasoning as in part (a), only now, use the length found in part (a) and the new angle to solve for the charge. nc
Chapter 4 Solutions
FUND PHYS 10TH EXT WILEY PLUS
Ch. 4 - Figure 4-21 shows the path taken by a skunk...Ch. 4 - Prob. 2QCh. 4 - When Paris was shelled from 100 km away with the...Ch. 4 - You are to launch a rocket, from just above the...Ch. 4 - Figure 4-23 shows three situations in which...Ch. 4 - The only good use of a fruitcake is in catapult...Ch. 4 - An airplane flying horizontally at a constant...Ch. 4 - In Fig. 4-25, a cream tangerine is thrown up past...Ch. 4 - Figure 4-26 shows three paths for a football...Ch. 4 - A ball is shot from ground level over level ground...
Ch. 4 - Figure 4-28 shows four tracks either half- or...Ch. 4 - In Fig. 4-29, particle P is in uniform circular...Ch. 4 - a Is it possible to be accelerating while...Ch. 4 - While riding in a moving car, you toss an egg...Ch. 4 - A snowball is thrown from ground level by someone...Ch. 4 - You are driving directly behind a pickup truck,...Ch. 4 - At what point in the path of a projectile is the...Ch. 4 - In shot put, the shot is put thrown from above the...Ch. 4 - Prob. 1PCh. 4 - A watermelon seed has the following coordinates: x...Ch. 4 - A positron undergoes a displacement r = 2.0 i 3.0...Ch. 4 - The minute hand of a wall clock measures 10 cm...Ch. 4 - SSM A train at a constant 60.0 km/h moves east for...Ch. 4 - An electrons position is given by...Ch. 4 - An ions position vector is initially...Ch. 4 - A plane flies 483 km east from city A to city B in...Ch. 4 - Figure 4-30 gives the path of a squirrel moving...Ch. 4 - The position vector r=5.00ti+(et+ft2)j locates a...Ch. 4 - Prob. 11PCh. 4 - At one instant a bicyclist is 40.0 m due east of a...Ch. 4 - SSM A particle moves so that its position in...Ch. 4 - A proton initially has v=4.0i2.0j+3.0k and then...Ch. 4 - SSM ILW A particle leaves the origin with an...Ch. 4 - GO The velocity v of a particle moving in the xy...Ch. 4 - A cart is propelled over an xy plane with...Ch. 4 - A moderate wind accelerates a pebble over a...Ch. 4 - The acceleration of a particle moving only on a...Ch. 4 - GO In Fig. 4-32, particle A moves along the line y...Ch. 4 - A dart is thrown horizontally with an initial...Ch. 4 - A small ball rolls horizontally off the edge of a...Ch. 4 - A projectile is fired horizontally from a gun that...Ch. 4 - In the 1991 World Track and Field Championships in...Ch. 4 - The current world-record motorcycle jump is 77.0...Ch. 4 - A stone is catapulted at time t = 0, with an...Ch. 4 - ILW A certain airplane has a speed of 290.0 km/h...Ch. 4 - GO In Fig. 4-34, a stone is projected at a cliff...Ch. 4 - A projectiles launch speed is five times its speed...Ch. 4 - GO A soccer ball is kicked from the ground with an...Ch. 4 - In a jump spike, a volleyball player slams the...Ch. 4 - GO You throw a ball toward a wall at speed 25.0...Ch. 4 - SSM A plane, diving with constant speed at an...Ch. 4 - A trebuchet was a hurling machine built to attack...Ch. 4 - SSM A rifle that shoots bullets at 460 m/s is to...Ch. 4 - GO During a tennis match, a player serves the ball...Ch. 4 - SSM WWW A lowly high diver pushes off horizontally...Ch. 4 - A golf ball is struck at ground level. The speed...Ch. 4 - In Fig. 4-37, a ball is thrown leftward from the...Ch. 4 - Suppose that a shot putter can put a shot at the...Ch. 4 - GO Upon spotting an insect on a twig overhanging...Ch. 4 - In 1939 or 1940, Emanuel Zacchini took his human...Ch. 4 - ILW A ball is shot from the ground into the air....Ch. 4 - A baseball leaves a pitchers hand horizontally at...Ch. 4 - In Fig. 4-40, a ball is launched with a velocity...Ch. 4 - GO In basketball, hang is an illusion in which a...Ch. 4 - Prob. 47PCh. 4 - GO In Fig. 4-41, a ball is thrown up onto a roof,...Ch. 4 - SSM A football kicker can give the ball an initial...Ch. 4 - GO Two seconds after being projected from ground...Ch. 4 - A skilled skier knows to jump upward before...Ch. 4 - A ball is to be shot from level ground toward a...Ch. 4 - GO In Fig. 4-44, a baseball is hit at a height h =...Ch. 4 - GO A ball is to be shot from level ground with a...Ch. 4 - SSM A ball rolls horizontally off the top of a...Ch. 4 - An Earth satellite moves in a circular orbit 640...Ch. 4 - A carnival merry-go-round rotates about a vertical...Ch. 4 - A rotating fan completes 1200 revolutions every...Ch. 4 - ILW A woman rides a carnival Ferris wheel at...Ch. 4 - A centripetal-acceleration addict rides in uniform...Ch. 4 - When a large star becomes a supernova, its core...Ch. 4 - What is the magnitude of the acceleration of a...Ch. 4 - GO At t1 = 2.00 s, the acceleration of a particle...Ch. 4 - GO A particle moves horizontally in uniform...Ch. 4 - A purse at radius 2.00 m and a wallet at radius...Ch. 4 - A particle moves along a circular path over a...Ch. 4 - SSM WWW A boy whirls a stone in a horizontal...Ch. 4 - GO A cat rides a merry-go-round turning with...Ch. 4 - A cameraman on a pickup truck is traveling...Ch. 4 - A boat is traveling upstream in the positive...Ch. 4 - A suspicious-looking man runs as fast as he can...Ch. 4 - A rugby player runs with the ball directly toward...Ch. 4 - Two highways intersect as shown in Fig. 4-46. At...Ch. 4 - After flying for 15 min in a wind blowing 42 km/h...Ch. 4 - SSM A train travels due south at 30 m/s relative...Ch. 4 - A light plane attains an airspeed of 500 km/h. The...Ch. 4 - SSM Snow is falling vertically at a constant speed...Ch. 4 - In the overhead view of Fig. 4-47, Jeeps P and B...Ch. 4 - SSM ILW Two ships, A and B, leave port at the same...Ch. 4 - GO A 200-m-wide river flows due east at a uniform...Ch. 4 - GO Ship A is located 4.0 km north and 2.5 km east...Ch. 4 - GO A 200-m-wide river has a uniform flow speed of...Ch. 4 - A woman who can row a boat at 6.4 km/h in still...Ch. 4 - In Fig. 4-48a, a sled moves in the negative x...Ch. 4 - You are kidnapped by political-science majors who...Ch. 4 - A radar station detects an airplane approaching...Ch. 4 - SSM A baseball is hit at ground level. The ball...Ch. 4 - Long flights at midlatitudes in the Northern...Ch. 4 - SSM A particle starts from the origin at t = 0...Ch. 4 - At what initial speed must the basketball player...Ch. 4 - During volcanic eruptions, chunks of solid rock...Ch. 4 - An astronaut is rotated in a horizontal centrifuge...Ch. 4 - SSM Oasis A is 90 km due west of oasis B. A desert...Ch. 4 - Curtain of death. A large metallic asteroid...Ch. 4 - Figure 4-53 shows the straight path of a particle...Ch. 4 - For womens volleyball the top of the net is 2.24 m...Ch. 4 - SSM A rifle is aimed horizontally at a target 30 m...Ch. 4 - A particle is in uniform circular motion about the...Ch. 4 - In Fig. 4-54, a lump of wet putty moves in uniform...Ch. 4 - An iceboat sails across the surface of a frozen...Ch. 4 - In Fig. 4-55, a ball is shot directly upward from...Ch. 4 - A magnetic field forces an electron to move in a...Ch. 4 - In 3.50 h, a balloon drifts 21.5 km north, 9.70 km...Ch. 4 - A ball is thrown horizontally from a height of 20...Ch. 4 - A projectile is launched with an initial speed of...Ch. 4 - The position vector for a proton is initially...Ch. 4 - A particle P travels with constant speed on a...Ch. 4 - The fast French train known as the TGV Train ...Ch. 4 - a If an electron is projected horizontally with a...Ch. 4 - A person walks up a stalled 15-m-long escalator in...Ch. 4 - a What is the magnitude of the centripetal...Ch. 4 - The range of a projectile depends not only on v0...Ch. 4 - Figure 4-57 shows the path taken by a drunk skunk...Ch. 4 - The position vector r of a particle moving in the...Ch. 4 - An electron having an initial horizontal velocity...Ch. 4 - An elevator without a ceiling is ascending with a...Ch. 4 - A football player punts the football so that it...Ch. 4 - An airport terminal has a moving sidewalk to speed...Ch. 4 - Prob. 119PCh. 4 - A sprinter running on a circular track has a...Ch. 4 - Suppose that a space probe can withstand the...Ch. 4 - GO You are to throw a ball with a speed of 12.0...Ch. 4 - A projectile is fired with an initial speed v0 =...Ch. 4 - A graphing surprise. At time t = 0, a burrito is...Ch. 4 - A cannon located at sea level fires a ball with...Ch. 4 - The magnitude of the velocity of a projectile when...Ch. 4 - A frightened rabbit moving at 6.00 m/s due east...Ch. 4 - The pilot of an aircraft flies due east relative...Ch. 4 - The pitcher in a slow-pitch softball game releases...Ch. 4 - Some state trooper departments use aircraft to...Ch. 4 - A golfer tees off from the top of a rise, giving...Ch. 4 - A track meet is held on a planet in a distant...Ch. 4 - A helicopter is flying in a straight line over a...Ch. 4 - A car travels around a flat circle on the ground,...Ch. 4 - You throw a ball from a cliff with an initial...Ch. 4 - A baseball is hit at Fenway Park in Boston at a...Ch. 4 - A transcontinental flight of 4350 km is scheduled...Ch. 4 - A woman can row a boat at 6.40 km/h in still...
Knowledge Booster
Similar questions
- A proton moves at 5.20 x 105 m/s in the horizontal direction. It enters a uniform vertical electric field with a magnitude of 8.40 × 103 N/C. Ignore any gravitational effects. (a) Find the time interval required for the proton to travel 6.00 cm horizontally. 83.33 Your response differs from the correct answer by more than 10%. Double check your calculations. ns (b) Find its vertical displacement during the time interval in which it travels 6.00 cm horizontally. (Indicate direction with the sign of your answer.) 2.77 Your response differs from the correct answer by more than 10%. Double check your calculations. mm (c) Find the horizontal and vertical components of its velocity after it has traveled 6.00 cm horizontally. = 5.4e5 Your response differs significantly from the correct answer. Rework your solution from the beginning and check each step carefully. I + 6.68e4 Your response differs significantly from the correct answer. Rework your solution from the beginning and check each step…arrow_forward(a) A physics lab instructor is working on a new demonstration. She attaches two identical copper spheres with mass m = 0.180 g to cords of length L as shown in the figure. A Both spheres have the same charge of 6.80 nC, and are in static equilibrium when = 4.95°. What is L (in m)? Assume the cords are massless. 0.150 Draw a free-body diagram, apply Newton's second law for a particle in equilibrium to one of the spheres. Find an equation for the distance between the two spheres in terms of L and 0, and use this expression in your Coulomb force equation. m (b) What If? The charge on both spheres is increased until each cord makes an angle of 0 = 9.90° with the vertical. If both spheres have the same electric charge, what is the charge (in nC) on each sphere in this case? 13.6 ☑ Use the same reasoning as in part (a), only now, use the length found in part (a) and the new angle to solve for the charge. nCarrow_forwardA proton moves at 5.20 x 105 m/s in the horizontal direction. It enters a uniform vertical electric field with a magnitude of 8.40 × 10³ N/C. Ignore any gravitational effects. (a) Find the time interval required for the proton to travel 6.00 cm horizontally. 1.15e-7 ☑ Your response differs significantly from the correct answer. Rework your solution from the beginning and check each step carefully. ns (b) Find its vertical displacement during the time interval in which it travels 6.00 cm horizontally. (Indicate direction with the sign of your answer.) 5.33e-3 ☑ Your response is off by a multiple of ten. mm (c) Find the horizontal and vertical components of its velocity after it has traveled 6.00 cm horizontally. | ↑ + jkm/sarrow_forward
- A proton moves at 5.20 105 m/s in the horizontal direction. It enters a uniform vertical electric field with a magnitude of 8.40 103 N/C. Ignore any gravitational effects. (a) Find the time interval required for the proton to travel 6.00 cm horizontally. (b) Find its vertical displacement during the time interval in which it travels 6.00 cm horizontally. (Indicate direction with the sign of your answer.)arrow_forwardThe figure below shows the electric field lines for two charged particles separated by a small distance. 92 91 (a) Determine the ratio 91/92. 1/3 × This is the correct magnitude for the ratio. (b) What are the signs of q₁ and 92? 91 positive 92 negative ×arrow_forwardPlease help me solve this one more detail, thanksarrow_forward
- A dielectric-filled parallel-plate capacitor has plate area A = 20.0 ccm2 , plate separaton d = 10.0 mm and dielectric constant k = 4.00. The capacitor is connected to a battery that creates a constant voltage V = 12.5 V . Throughout the problem, use ϵ0 = 8.85×10−12 C2/N⋅m2 . Find the energy U1 of the dielectric-filled capacitor. The dielectric plate is now slowly pulled out of the capacitor, which remains connected to the battery. Find the energy U2 of the capacitor at the moment when the capacitor is half-filled with the dielectric. The capacitor is now disconnected from the battery, and the dielectric plate is slowly removed the rest of the way out of the capacitor. Find the new energy of the capacitor, U3. In the process of removing the remaining portion of the dielectric from the disconnected capacitor, how much work W is done by the external agent acting on the dielectric?arrow_forwardIn (Figure 1) C1 = 6.00 μF, C2 = 6.00 μF, C3 = 12.0 μF, and C4 = 3.00 μF. The capacitor network is connected to an applied potential difference Vab. After the charges on the capacitors have reached their final values, the voltage across C3 is 40.0 V. What is the voltage across C4? What is the voltage Vab applied to the network? Please explain everything in steps.arrow_forwardI need help with these questions again. A step by step working out with diagrams that explains more clearlyarrow_forward
- In a certain region of space the electric potential is given by V=+Ax2y−Bxy2, where A = 5.00 V/m3 and B = 8.00 V/m3. Calculate the direction angle of the electric field at the point in the region that has cordinates x = 2.50 m, y = 0.400 m, and z = 0. Please explain. The answer is not 60, 120, or 30.arrow_forwardAn infinitely long line of charge has linear charge density 4.00×10−12 C/m . A proton (mass 1.67×10−−27 kg, charge +1.60×10−19 C) is 18.0 cm from the line and moving directly toward the line at 4.10×103 m/s . How close does the proton get to the line of charge?arrow_forwardat a certain location the horizontal component of the earth’s magnetic field is 2.5 x 10^-5 T due north A proton moves eastward with just the right speed so the magnetic force on it balances its weight. Find the speed of the proton.arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology ...PhysicsISBN:9781305116399Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781305952300Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage Learning
- Classical Dynamics of Particles and SystemsPhysicsISBN:9780534408961Author:Stephen T. Thornton, Jerry B. MarionPublisher:Cengage LearningUniversity Physics Volume 1PhysicsISBN:9781938168277Author:William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff SannyPublisher:OpenStax - Rice UniversityCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage Learning

Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning

Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology ...
Physics
ISBN:9781305116399
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning

College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781305952300
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning

Classical Dynamics of Particles and Systems
Physics
ISBN:9780534408961
Author:Stephen T. Thornton, Jerry B. Marion
Publisher:Cengage Learning

University Physics Volume 1
Physics
ISBN:9781938168277
Author:William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff Sanny
Publisher:OpenStax - Rice University

College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781285737027
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning