College Physics
OER 2016 Edition
ISBN: 9781947172173
Author: OpenStax
Publisher: OpenStax College
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Chapter 4, Problem 20TP
To determine
The expected acceleration and the reason for the same.
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3. A 40-kg crate falls off a truck traveling at 80 km/h on a level road. The crate slides along the road and gradually comes to a halt. The coefficient of kinetic friction between the crate and the road is 0.80.a. Draw a “free-body” diagram for the crate sliding on the road.b. What is the normal force the road exerts on the crate?c. What is the friction force the road exerts on the crate?d. What is the weight force on the crate?e. What is the net force on the crate?f. What is the deceleration of the crate?g. Find the work done by each force acting on the crate.h. Find the total work done by all the forces.
3. Starting from rest, a 125 kg body experiences a force of 150
newtons acting on it in a direction parallel to the positive x-axis
and a force of 125 newtons acting at 45° with respect to the
positive x-axis.
a. What is the net force acting on the body? Include direction.
b. What is the acceleration of the body?
c. What velocity does it reach after 2.5 seconds?
3. Starting from rest, a 150 kg body experiences a force of 100 newtons acting on it in a direction parallel to the positive x-axis and a force of 150 newtons acting at 55° with respect to the positive x-axis.a. What is the net force acting on the body? Include direction.b. What is the acceleration of the body?c. What velocity does it reach after 5 seconds?
Chapter 4 Solutions
College Physics
Ch. 4 - Propose a force standard different from the...Ch. 4 - What properties do forces have that allow us to...Ch. 4 - How are inertia and mass related?Ch. 4 - What is the relationship between weight and mass?...Ch. 4 - Which statement is correct? (a) Net force causes...Ch. 4 - Why can we neglect forces such as those holding a...Ch. 4 - Explain how the choice of the “Stem of interest”...Ch. 4 - Describe a situation in which the net external...Ch. 4 - A system can have a nonzero velocity while the net...Ch. 4 - A rock is thrown straight up. What is the net...
Ch. 4 - (a) Give an example of different net external...Ch. 4 - If the acceleration of a system is zero, are no...Ch. 4 - If a constant, nonzero force is applied to an...Ch. 4 - The gravitational force on the basketball in...Ch. 4 - When you take off in a jet aircraft, there is a...Ch. 4 - A device used since the 1940s to measure the kick...Ch. 4 - Describe a Situation in which one a force on and,...Ch. 4 - Why does an ordinary rifle recoil (kick backward)...Ch. 4 - An American football lineman reasons that it is...Ch. 4 - Newton's third law of motion tells us that forces...Ch. 4 - If a leg is suspended by a traction setup as shown...Ch. 4 - Ina traction setup a broken bone, with pulleys and...Ch. 4 - To simulate the apparent weightlessness of space...Ch. 4 - A cartoon shows the toupee coming off the head of...Ch. 4 - Explain, in terms of the properties of the four...Ch. 4 - What is the dominant force between astronomical...Ch. 4 - Give a detailed example of the exchange of a...Ch. 4 - A 63.0-kg sprinter starts a race with an...Ch. 4 - If the sprinter from the previous problem...Ch. 4 - A cleaner pushes a 4.50-kg laundry cart in such a...Ch. 4 - Since astronauts in orbit are apparently...Ch. 4 - In Figure 4.7, the net external force on the 24-kg...Ch. 4 - The same rocket sled drawn in Figure 4.31 is...Ch. 4 - (a) If the rocket sled shown in Figure 4.32 starts...Ch. 4 - What is the deceleration of the rocket sled if it...Ch. 4 - Suppose two children push horizontally, but in...Ch. 4 - A powerful motorcycle can produce an acceleration...Ch. 4 - The rocket sled shown in Figure 4.33 accelerates...Ch. 4 - Repeat the previous problem for the situation in...Ch. 4 - The weight of an astronaut plus his space suit on...Ch. 4 - Suppose the mass of a fully loaded module in which...Ch. 4 - What net external force is exerted on a 1100-kg...Ch. 4 - A brave but inadequate rugby player is being...Ch. 4 - Two teams of nine members each engage in a tug of...Ch. 4 - What force does a trampoline have to apply to a...Ch. 4 - (a) Calculate the tension in a vertical strand of...Ch. 4 - Suppose a 60.0-kg gymnast climbs a rope. (a) What...Ch. 4 - Show that, as stated in the text, a force F...Ch. 4 - Consider the baby being weighed in Figure 4.34....Ch. 4 - A 5.00105 -kg rocket is accelerating straight up....Ch. 4 - The wheels of a midsize car exert a force of 2100...Ch. 4 - Calculate the force a 70.0-kg high jumper must...Ch. 4 - When landing after a spectacular somersault, a...Ch. 4 - A freight train consists of two 8.00104 -kg...Ch. 4 - Commercial airplanes are sometimes pushed out of...Ch. 4 - A 1100-kg car pulls a boat on a trailer. (a) What...Ch. 4 - (a) Find the magnitudes of the forces F1 and F2...Ch. 4 - Two children pull a third child on a snow saucer...Ch. 4 - Suppose your car was mired deeply in the mud and...Ch. 4 - What force is exerted on the tooth in Figure 4.38...Ch. 4 - Figure 4.39 shows Superhero and Trusty Sidekick...Ch. 4 - A nurse pushes a cart by exerting a force on the...Ch. 4 - Construct Your Own Problem Consider the tension in...Ch. 4 - Construct Your Own Problem Consider people pushing...Ch. 4 - Unreasonable Results (a) Repeat Exercise 4.29, but...Ch. 4 -
Ch. 4 - A flea jumps by exerting a force of 1.20105 N...Ch. 4 - Two muscles in the back of the leg pull upward on...Ch. 4 - A 76.0-kg person is being pulled away from a...Ch. 4 - Integrated Concepts A 35.0-kg dolphin decelerates...Ch. 4 - Integrated Concepts When starting a foot race, a...Ch. 4 - Integrated Concepts A large rocket has a mass of...Ch. 4 - Integrated Concepts A basketball player jumps...Ch. 4 - Integrated Concepts A 2.50-kg fireworks shell is...Ch. 4 - Integrated Concepts Repeat Exercise 4.47 for a...Ch. 4 - Integrated Concepts An elevator filled with...Ch. 4 - Unreasonable Results (a) What is the final...Ch. 4 - Unreasonable Results A 75.0-kg man stands on a...Ch. 4 - (a) What is the strength of the weak nuclear force...Ch. 4 - (a) What is the ratio of the strength of the...Ch. 4 - What is the ratio of the strength of the strong...Ch. 4 - Prob. 1TPCh. 4 - Prob. 2TPCh. 4 - Prob. 3TPCh. 4 - Prob. 4TPCh. 4 - Prob. 5TPCh. 4 - Prob. 6TPCh. 4 - Prob. 7TPCh. 4 - Prob. 8TPCh. 4 - Prob. 9TPCh. 4 - Prob. 10TPCh. 4 - Prob. 11TPCh. 4 - Prob. 12TPCh. 4 - Prob. 13TPCh. 4 - Prob. 14TPCh. 4 - Prob. 15TPCh. 4 - Prob. 16TPCh. 4 - Prob. 17TPCh. 4 - Prob. 18TPCh. 4 - Prob. 19TPCh. 4 - Prob. 20TPCh. 4 - Prob. 21TPCh. 4 - Prob. 22TPCh. 4 - Prob. 23TPCh. 4 - Prob. 24TPCh. 4 - Prob. 25TPCh. 4 - Prob. 26TPCh. 4 - Prob. 27TPCh. 4 - Prob. 28TPCh. 4 - Prob. 29TPCh. 4 - Prob. 30TPCh. 4 - Prob. 31TPCh. 4 - Prob. 32TPCh. 4 - Prob. 33TPCh. 4 - Prob. 34TP
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- . As a baseball is being caught, its speed goes from 30 to 0 m/s in about 0.005 s. Its mass is 0.145 kg. (a) What is the baseball’s acceleration in m/s and in Ws? (b) What is the size of the force acting on it?arrow_forwardWhat forces act on you as you walk across a room? Draw a free-body diagram showing all of them. Which force or forces propel you forward? Why is it more difficult to walk on a slippery surface than on a nonslippery one? Explain how you use Newtons third law to control your motion.arrow_forwardA 1100-kg car pulls a boat on a trailer. (a) What total force resists the motion of the car, boat, and trailer, if the car exerts a 1900-N force on the road and produces an acceleration of 0.550 m/s2? The mass of the boat plus trailer is 700 kg. (b) What is the force in the hitch between the car and the trailer if 80% of the resisting forces are experienced by the boat and trailer?arrow_forward
- When Julia Child would cook an omelet, she would rapidly jostle the pan back and forth (Fig. P5.4). The egg would slosh back and forth in the pan as it cooked. Use Newtons laws to explain the eggs motion. FIGURE P5.4arrow_forwardAn elevator filled with passengers has a mass of 1.70103kg . (a) The elevator accelerates upward from rest at a rate of 1.20m/s2for 1.50 s. Calculate the tension in the cable supporting the elevator. (b) The elevator continues upward at constant velocity for 8.50 s. What is the tension in the cable during this time? (c) The elevator decelerates at a rate of 0.600 in/s2 for 0.600m/s2 3.00 s. What is the tension in the cable during deceleration? (d) How high has the elevator moved above its original starting point, and what is its final velocity?arrow_forwardThree 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_forward
- Consider the baby being weighed in Figure 4.34. (a) What is the mass of the child and basket if a scale reading of 55 N is observed? (b) What is the tension T1 in the cord attaching the baby to the scale? (c) What is the tension T2 in the cord attaching the scale to the ceiling, if the scale has a mass of 0.500 kg? (d) Draw a sketch of the situation indicating the system of interest used to solve each part. The masses of the cords are negligible.arrow_forwardTwo forces, one equal to 15 N and another equal to 40 N, act on a 50-kg crate resting on a horizontal surface as shown in Figure 2.55. (a) What is the net horizontal force on the crate? (b) What is its horizontal acceleration? (c) If the crate starts from rest, what is its horizontal speed after 5 s? (d) How far has the crate traveled along the surface in this time?arrow_forwardA block of mass 2.20 kg is accelerated across a rough surface by a light cord passing over a small pulley as shown in Figure P5.51. The tension T in the cord is maintained at 10.0 N, and the pulley is 0.100 m above the top of the block. The coefficient of kinetic friction is 0.400. (a) Determine the acceleration of the block when x = 0.400 m. (b) Describe the general behavior of the acceleration as the block slides from a location where x is large to x = 0. (c) Find the maximum value of the acceleration and the position x for which it occurs. (d) Find the value of x for which the acceleration is zero. Figure P5.51arrow_forward
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