FUND.OF PHYSICS(LL)-PRINT..W/ACCESS
12th Edition
ISBN: 9781119773504
Author: Halliday
Publisher: WILEY
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
no ai please
A block of mass m₁ = 1.85 kg and a block of mass m₂
is 0.360 for both blocks.
=
m
M, R
m2
Ꮎ
5.90 kg are connected by a massless string over a pulley in the shape of a solid disk having a mass of M = 10.0 kg. The fixed, wedge-shaped ramp makes an angle of 0 = 30.0° as shown in the figure. The coefficient of kinetic friction
(a) Determine the acceleration of the two blocks. (Enter the magnitude of the acceleration.)
x m/s²
(b) Determine the tensions in the string on both sides of the pulley.
left of the pulley
× N
right of the pulley
X N
Enter a number.
What is the error determined by the 2/3 rule?
Chapter 4 Solutions
FUND.OF PHYSICS(LL)-PRINT..W/ACCESS
Ch. 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 - An airplane flying horizontally at a constant...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. 1P
Ch. 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 - 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 - 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 - 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 - 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 - Suppose that a shot putter can put a shot at the...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 - GO In basketball, hang is an illusion in which a...Ch. 4 - Prob. 47PCh. 4 - SSM A football kicker can give the ball an initial...Ch. 4 - GO Two seconds after being projected from ground...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 - 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 - 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 - Prob. 81PCh. 4 - GO A 200-m-wide river has a uniform flow speed of...Ch. 4 - Prob. 83PCh. 4 - You are kidnapped by political-science majors who...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 - 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 - 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 - An iceboat sails across the surface of a frozen...Ch. 4 - Prob. 101PCh. 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 - 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 - The position vector r of a particle moving in the...Ch. 4 - Prob. 115PCh. 4 - Prob. 116PCh. 4 - Prob. 117PCh. 4 - Prob. 118PCh. 4 - Prob. 119PCh. 4 - Prob. 120PCh. 4 - Prob. 121PCh. 4 - Prob. 122PCh. 4 - Prob. 123PCh. 4 - Prob. 124PCh. 4 - Prob. 125PCh. 4 - Prob. 126PCh. 4 - Prob. 127PCh. 4 - Prob. 128P
Knowledge Booster
Similar questions
- Your colleague gives you a sample that are supposed to consist of Pt-Ni nanoparticles, TiO2 nanorod arrays, and SiO2 monolith plates (see right panel schematic). The bimetallic Pt-Ni nanoparticles are expected to decorate on the side surfaces of the aligned TiO2 nanorod arrays. These aligned TiO2 nanoarrays grew on the flat SiO2 monolith. Let's assume that the sizes of the Pt-Ni nanoparticles are > 10 nm. We further assume that you have access to a modern SEM that can produce a probe size as small as 1 nm with a current as high as 1 nA. You are not expected to damage/destroy the sample. Hint: keep your answers concise and to the point. TiO₂ Nanorods SiO, monolith a) What do you plan to do if your colleague wants to know if the Pt and Ni formed uniform alloy nanoparticles? (5 points) b) If your colleague wants to know the spatial distribution of the PtNi nanoparticles with respect to the TiO2 nanoarrays, how do you accomplish such a goal? (5 points) c) Based on the experimental results…arrow_forwardFind the current in 5.00 and 7.00 Ω resistors. Please explain all reasoningarrow_forwardFind the amplitude, wavelength, period, and the speed of the wave.arrow_forward
- A long solenoid of length 6.70 × 10-2 m and cross-sectional area 5.0 × 10-5 m² contains 6500 turns per meter of length. Determine the emf induced in the solenoid when the current in the solenoid changes from 0 to 1.5 A during the time interval from 0 to 0.20 s. Number Unitsarrow_forwardA coat hanger of mass m = 0.255 kg oscillates on a peg as a physical pendulum as shown in the figure below. The distance from the pivot to the center of mass of the coat hanger is d = 18.0 cm and the period of the motion is T = 1.37 s. Find the moment of inertia of the coat hanger about the pivot.arrow_forwardReview Conceptual Example 3 and the drawing as an aid in solving this problem. A conducting rod slides down between two frictionless vertical copper tracks at a constant speed of 3.9 m/s perpendicular to a 0.49-T magnetic field. The resistance of th rod and tracks is negligible. The rod maintains electrical contact with the tracks at all times and has a length of 1.4 m. A 1.1-Q resistor is attached between the tops of the tracks. (a) What is the mass of the rod? (b) Find the change in the gravitational potentia energy that occurs in a time of 0.26 s. (c) Find the electrical energy dissipated in the resistor in 0.26 s.arrow_forward
- A camera lens used for taking close-up photographs has a focal length of 21.5 mm. The farthest it can be placed from the film is 34.0 mm. (a) What is the closest object (in mm) that can be photographed? 58.5 mm (b) What is the magnification of this closest object? 0.581 × ×arrow_forwardGiven two particles with Q = 4.40-µC charges as shown in the figure below and a particle with charge q = 1.40 ✕ 10−18 C at the origin. (Note: Assume a reference level of potential V = 0 at r = ∞.) Three positively charged particles lie along the x-axis of the x y coordinate plane.Charge q is at the origin.Charge Q is at (0.800 m, 0).Another charge Q is at (−0.800 m, 0).(a)What is the net force (in N) exerted by the two 4.40-µC charges on the charge q? (Enter the magnitude.) N(b)What is the electric field (in N/C) at the origin due to the two 4.40-µC particles? (Enter the magnitude.) N/C(c)What is the electrical potential (in kV) at the origin due to the two 4.40-µC particles? kV(d)What If? What would be the change in electric potential energy (in J) of the system if the charge q were moved a distance d = 0.400 m closer to either of the 4.40-µC particles?arrow_forward(a) Where does an object need to be placed relative to a microscope in cm from the objective lens for its 0.500 cm focal length objective to produce a magnification of -25? (Give your answer to at least three decimal places.) 0.42 × cm (b) Where should the 5.00 cm focal length eyepiece be placed in cm behind the objective lens to produce a further fourfold (4.00) magnification? 15 × cmarrow_forward
- In a LASIK vision correction, the power of a patient's eye is increased by 3.10 D. Assuming this produces normal close vision, what was the patient's near point in m before the procedure? (The power for normal close vision is 54.0 D, and the lens-to-retina distance is 2.00 cm.) 0.98 x marrow_forwardDon't use ai to answer I will report you answerarrow_forwardA shopper standing 2.00 m from a convex security mirror sees his image with a magnification of 0.200. (Explicitly show on paper how you follow the steps in the Problem-Solving Strategy for mirrors found on page 1020. Your instructor may ask you to turn in this work.) (a) Where is his image (in m)? (Use the correct sign.) -0.4 m in front of the mirror ▾ (b) What is the focal length (in m) of the mirror? -0.5 m (c) What is its radius of curvature (in m)? -1.0 marrow_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