University Physics with Modern Physics, Books a la Carte Edition; Modified MasteringPhysics with Pearson eText -- ValuePack Access Card -- for ... eText -- Valuepack Access Card (14th Edition)
14th Edition
ISBN: 9780134308142
Author: Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 5, Problem 5.72P
A 6.00-kg box sits on a ramp that is inclined at 37.0° above the horizontal. The coefficient of kinetic friction between the box and the ramp is μk = 0.30. What horizontal force is required to move the box up the incline with a constant acceleration of 3.60 m/s2?
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A 6.00-kg box sits on a ramp that is inclined at 37.0 degrees above the horizontal. The coefficient of kinetic friction between the box and the ramp is uk = 0.30. What horizontal force is required to move the box up the incline with a constant acceleration of 3.60 m/s2?
A 7kg block is placed on an inclined that is 24 degrees to the horizontal. It has a coefficient of friction of 0.23. A force from the left at an angle is pushing the block. The acceleration of gravity is 9.8 m/s2. What force is required to push the block up the incline with constant velocity?
A 6.00 kg box sits at rest at the bottom of a ramp that is 8.00 mm long and is inclined at 30.0 degrees above the horizontal. The coefficient of kinetic friction is μk = 0.40, and the coefficient of static friction is μs = 0.43.
What constant force F, applied parallel to the surface of the ramp, is required to push the box to the top of the ramp in a time of 6.00 s?
Express your answer to four significant figures and include the appropriate units.
Chapter 5 Solutions
University Physics with Modern Physics, Books a la Carte Edition; Modified MasteringPhysics with Pearson eText -- ValuePack Access Card -- for ... eText -- Valuepack Access Card (14th Edition)
Ch. 5.1 - A traffic light of weight w hangs from two...Ch. 5.2 - Suppose you hold the glider in Example 5.12 so...Ch. 5.3 - Consider a box that is placed on different...Ch. 5.4 - Satellites are held in orbit by the force of our...Ch. 5 - A man sits in a seat that is hanging from a rope....Ch. 5 - In general, the normal force is not equal to the...Ch. 5 - A clothesline hangs between two poles. No matter...Ch. 5 - You drive a car up a steep hill at constant speed....Ch. 5 - For medical reasons, astronauts in outer space...Ch. 5 - To push a box up a ramp, which requires less...
Ch. 5 - A woman in an elevator lets go of her briefcase,...Ch. 5 - A block rests on an inclined plane with enough...Ch. 5 - A crate slides up an inclined ramp and then slides...Ch. 5 - A crate of books rests on a level floor. To move...Ch. 5 - In a world without friction, which of the...Ch. 5 - When you stand with bare feet in a wet bathtub,...Ch. 5 - You are pushing a large crate from the back of a...Ch. 5 - It is often said that friction always opposes...Ch. 5 - If there is a net force on a particle in uniform...Ch. 5 - A curve in a road has a bank angle calculated and...Ch. 5 - You swing a ball on the end of a lightweight...Ch. 5 - The centrifugal force is not included in the...Ch. 5 - A professor swings a rubber stopper in a...Ch. 5 - To keep the forces on the riders within allowable...Ch. 5 - A tennis ball drops from rest at the top of a tall...Ch. 5 - You throw a baseball straight upward with speed 0....Ch. 5 - You throw a baseball straight upward. 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After emergencies...Ch. 5 - In a laboratory experiment on friction, a 135-N...Ch. 5 - CP A stockroom worker pushes a box with mass 16.8...Ch. 5 - A box of bananas weighing 40.0 N rests on a...Ch. 5 - A 45.0-kg crate of tools rests on a horizontal...Ch. 5 - Some sliding rocks approach the base of a hill...Ch. 5 - A box with mass 10.0 kg moves on a ramp that is...Ch. 5 - A pickup truck is carrying a toolbox, but the rear...Ch. 5 - You are lowering two boxes, one on top of the...Ch. 5 - Consider the system shown in Fig. E5.34. Block A...Ch. 5 - CP Stopping Distance. (a) If the coefficient of...Ch. 5 - CP A 25.0-kg box of textbooks rests on a loading...Ch. 5 - Two crates connected by a rope lie on a horizontal...Ch. 5 - A box with mass m is dragged across a level floor...Ch. 5 - CP As shown in Fig. E5.34, block A (mass 2.25 kg)...Ch. 5 - You throw a baseball straight upward. The drag...Ch. 5 - A large crate with mass m rests on a horizontal...Ch. 5 - (a) In Example 5.18 (Section 5.3), what value of D...Ch. 5 - A stone with mass 0.80 kg is attached to one end...Ch. 5 - BIO Force on a Skaters Wrist. A 52-kg ice skater...Ch. 5 - A small remote-controlled car with mass 1.60 kg...Ch. 5 - 5.46A small car with mass 0.800 kg travels at...Ch. 5 - A small model car with mass m travels at constant...Ch. 5 - A flat (unbanked) curve on a highway has a radius...Ch. 5 - A 1125-kg car and a 2250-kg pickup truck approach...Ch. 5 - The Giant Swing at a county fair consists of a...Ch. 5 - In another version of the Giant Swing (see...Ch. 5 - A small button placed on a horizontal rotating...Ch. 5 - Rotating Space Stations. One problem for humans...Ch. 5 - The Cosmo Clock 21 Ferris wheel in Yokohama,...Ch. 5 - An airplane flies in a loop (a circular path in a...Ch. 5 - A 50.0-kg stunt pilot who has been diving her...Ch. 5 - Stay Dry! You tie a cord to a pail of water and...Ch. 5 - A bowling ball weighing 71.2 N (16.0 lb) is...Ch. 5 - BIO Effect on Blood of Walking. While a person is...Ch. 5 - An adventurous archaeologist crosses between two...Ch. 5 - Two ropes are connected to a steel cable that...Ch. 5 - In Fig. P5.62 a worker lifts a weight w by pulling...Ch. 5 - In a repair shop a truck engine that has mass 409...Ch. 5 - A horizontal wire holds a solid uniform ball of...Ch. 5 - A solid uniform 45.0-kg ball of diameter 32.0 cm...Ch. 5 - CP A box is sliding with a constant speed of 4.00...Ch. 5 - CP BIO Forces During Chin-ups. When you do a...Ch. 5 - CP CALC A 2.00-kg box is suspended from the end of...Ch. 5 - CALC A 3.00-kg box that is several hundred meters...Ch. 5 - CP A 5.00-kg box sits at rest at the bottom of a...Ch. 5 - Two boxes connected by a light horizontal rope are...Ch. 5 - A 6.00-kg box sits on a ramp that is inclined at...Ch. 5 - CP An 8.00-kg box sits on a ramp that is inclined...Ch. 5 - CP In Fig. P5.74, m1 = 20.0 kg and = 53.1. The...Ch. 5 - CP You place a book of mass 5.00 kg against a...Ch. 5 - Block A in Fig. P5.76 weighs 60.0 N. The...Ch. 5 - A block with mass m1 is placed on an inclined...Ch. 5 - BIO The Flying Leap of a Flea. High-speed motion...Ch. 5 - Block A in Fig. P5.79 weighs 1.20 N, and block B...Ch. 5 - CP Elevator Design. 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You are riding in an...Ch. 5 - A block is placed against the vertical front of a...Ch. 5 - Two blocks, with masses 4.00 kg and 8.00 kg, are...Ch. 5 - Block A, with weight 3w, slides down an inclined...Ch. 5 - Jack sits in the chair of a Ferris wheel that is...Ch. 5 - Bunked Curve I. A curve with a 120-m radius on a...Ch. 5 - Banked Curve II. Consider a wet roadway banked as...Ch. 5 - Blocks A, B, and C are placed as in Fig. P5.101...Ch. 5 - You are riding in a school bus. As the bus rounds...Ch. 5 - CALC You throw a rock downward into water with a...Ch. 5 - A 4.00-kg block is attached to a vertical rod by...Ch. 5 - On the ride Spindletop at the amusement park Six...Ch. 5 - A 70-kg person rides in a 30-kg cart moving at 12...Ch. 5 - A small bead can slide without friction on a...Ch. 5 - A physics major is working to pay her college...Ch. 5 - DATA In your physics lab, a block of mass m is at...Ch. 5 - DATA A road heading due cast passes over a small...Ch. 5 - DATA You are an engineer working for a...Ch. 5 - Moving Wedge. A wedge with mass M rests on a...Ch. 5 - Figure P5.112 5.113A wedge with mass M rests on a...Ch. 5 - Double Atwoods Machine. In Fig. P5.114 masses m1...Ch. 5 - A ball is held at rest at position A in Fig....Ch. 5 - FRICTION AND CLIMBING SHOES. Shoes made for the...Ch. 5 - FRICTION AND CLIMBING SHOES. Shoes made for the...Ch. 5 - FRICTION AND CLIMBING SHOES. Shoes made for the...
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