Concept explainers
(a) An elevator of mass m moving upward has two forces acting on it: the upward force of tension in the cable and the downward force due to gravity. When the elevator is accelerating upward, which is greater, T or w? (b) When the elevator is moving at a constant velocity upward, which is greater, T or w? (c) When the elevator is moving upward, but the acceleration is downward, which is greater, T or w? (d) Let the elevator have a mass of 1 500 kg and an upward acceleration of 2.5 m/s2. Find T. Is your answer consistent with the answer to part (a)? (e) The elevator of part (d) now moves with a constant upward velocity of 10 m/s. Find T. Is your answer consistent with your answer to part (b)? (f) Having initially moved upward with a constant velocity, the elevator begins to accelerate downward at 1.50 m/s2. Find T. Is your answer consistent with your answer to part (c)?
(a)
The tension on the cable.
Answer to Problem 37P
Tension (T) on the cable should be greater than the weight.
Explanation of Solution
Given Info: Mass of the block is m.
Weight of the elevator is,
- g is the acceleration due to gravity.
- m is the mass of the block.
Conclusion:
The force of gravity acts downwards. For the elevator to move upwards,
(b)
The tension on the cable.
Answer to Problem 37P
Tension (T) on the cable is equal to the weight.
Explanation of Solution
According to Newton’s second law, force is equal to the product of mass and acceleration.
Force is expressed as,
- a is the acceleration.
- m is the mass of the block.
Conclusion:
Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity. Since, velocity is constant, the acceleration is zero. Therefore, the total force is zero. As a result, the tension equals the weight of the elevator.
(c)
The tension on the cable.
Answer to Problem 37P
Tension (T) on the cable should be lesser than the weight.
Explanation of Solution
Given Info: Mass of the block is m.
Weight of the elevator is,
- g is the acceleration due to gravity.
- m is the mass of the block.
Conclusion:
The force of gravity acts downwards. For the elevator to move downwards,
(d)
The tension on the cable.
Answer to Problem 37P
Tension (T) on the cable should be greater than the weight.
Explanation of Solution
Tension on the cable is,
- g is the acceleration due to gravity.
- m is the mass of the block.
- a is the acceleration.
Weight of the elevator is,
- g is the acceleration due to gravity.
- m is the mass of the block.
Substitute 1200 kg for m,
Substitute 1200 kg for m and
Conclusion:
Tension on the cable is 14760 N. The weight of the elevator is 11760 N. Therefore,
T > W.
(e)
The tension on the cable.
Answer to Problem 37P
Tension (T) on the cable is equal to the weight.
Explanation of Solution
Tension on the cable is,
- g is the acceleration due to gravity.
- m is the mass of the block.
- a is the acceleration.
Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity. Since, velocity is constant, the acceleration is zero
Weight of the elevator is,
- g is the acceleration due to gravity.
- m is the mass of the block.
Substitute 1200 kg for m,
Substitute 1200 kg for m and
Conclusion:
Therefore, T = W. It is consistent with (b).
(f)
The tension on the cable.
Answer to Problem 37P
Tension (T) on the cable should be lesser than the weight.
Explanation of Solution
Tension on the cable is,
- g is the acceleration due to gravity.
- m is the mass of the block.
- a is the acceleration.
Weight of the elevator is,
- g is the acceleration due to gravity.
- m is the mass of the block.
Substitute 1200 kg for m,
Substitute 1200 kg for m and
Conclusion:
Therefore,
Want to see more full solutions like this?
Chapter 4 Solutions
College Physics 11E Global Edition
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Biology: Life on Earth with Physiology (11th Edition)
Chemistry: Atoms First
MARINE BIOLOGY
General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry - 4th edition
Human Anatomy & Physiology (2nd Edition)
- 1. What is the spring constant of a spring that starts 10.0 cm long and extends to 11.4 cm with a 300 g mass hanging from it?arrow_forwardplease help me solve all parts of this question from physics. thanks so much in advance! :)))arrow_forwardA fluid with density 263 kg/m3 flows through a pipe of varying diameter and height. At location 1 the flow speed is 13.5 m/s and the diameter of the pipe is 7.4 cm down to location 2 the pipe diameter is 16.9 cm. Location 1 is 6.3 meters higher than location 2. What is the difference in pressure P2 - P1? Using units in Pascals and use g = 9.81 m/s2.arrow_forward
- The kitchen had a temperature 46 degrees Fahrenheit and was converted it to Kelvin. What is the correct number for this temperature (46 F) on the Kelvin scale?arrow_forwardWater is traveling at a speed of 0.65 m/s through a pipe with a cross-section radius of 0.23 meters. The water enters a section of pipe that has a smaller radius, only 0.11 meters. What is the speed of the water traveling in this narrower section of pipe?arrow_forwardA particular water pipe has a radius of 0.28 meters. If the pipe is completely filled with water, moving with average velocity 0.45 m/s, what is the flow rate of water through the pipe with units of cubic meters of water per second?arrow_forward
- Water is flowing through a horizontal pipe with two segments. In one segment, the water flows at a speed v1 = 4.52 m/s. In the second segment the speed of the water is v2 = 2.38 m/s. Based on Bernoulli's Principle, what is the difference in pressure (P2 - P1) between the two segments? Assume that the density of the water is 997 kg/m3 and give your answer as the number of Pascals (i.e. N/m2).arrow_forwardWater from the faucet is supplied to the hose at a rate of 0.00057 m3/s. At what speed (number of meters per second) does the water exit the nozzle if the cross sectional area of the narrow nozzle is 2.1 x 10-6 m2?arrow_forwardJason Fruits/Indiana University Research Communications Silver/ silver oxide Zinc zinc/oxidearrow_forward
- Car P moves to the west with constant speed v0 along a straight road. Car Q starts from rest at instant 1, and moves to the west with increasing speed. At instant 5, car Q has speed w0 relative to the road (w0 < v0). Instants 1-5 are separated by equal time intervals. At instant 3, cars P and Q are adjacent to one another (i.e., they have the same position). In the reference frame o f the road, at instant 3 i s the speed o f car Q greater than, less than, or equal to the speed of car P? Explain.arrow_forwardCar P moves to the west with constant speed v0 along a straight road. Car Q starts from rest at instant 1, and moves to the west with increasing speed. At instant 5, car Q has speed w0 relative to the road (w0 < v0). Instants 1-5 are separated by equal time intervals.arrow_forwardCar P moves to the west with constant speed v0 along a straight road. Car Q starts from rest at instant 1, and moves to the west with increasing speed. At instant 5, car Q has speed w0 relative to the road (w0 < v0). Instants 1-5 are separated by equal time intervals. Sketch and label a vector diagram illustrating the Galilean transformation of velocities that relates velocity of car P relative to the road, velocity of car Q relative to road, and velocity of car Q relative to car P at instant 3. In the frame of car P, at instant 3 is car Q moving to the west, moving to the east, or at rest? Explain.arrow_forward
- Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningUniversity Physics Volume 1PhysicsISBN:9781938168277Author:William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff SannyPublisher:OpenStax - Rice UniversityCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781305952300Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage Learning
- College PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage LearningClassical Dynamics of Particles and SystemsPhysicsISBN:9780534408961Author:Stephen T. Thornton, Jerry B. MarionPublisher:Cengage Learning