
Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics
4th Edition
ISBN: 9780131495081
Author: Douglas C. Giancoli
Publisher: Addison-Wesley
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Textbook Question
Chapter 8, Problem 6P
(II) A 1200-kg car rolling on a horizontal surface has speed v = 75 km/h when it strikes a horizontal coiled spring and is brought to rest in a distance of 2.2 m. What is the spring stiffness constant of the spring?
Expert Solution & Answer

Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solution
Students have asked these similar questions
2. A powerful motorcycle can produce an acceleration of 3.50 m/s² while traveling at 90.0 km/h. At that
speed the forces resisting motion, including friction and air resistance, total 400 N. (Air resistance is
analogous to air friction. It always opposes the motion of an object.) What force does the motorcycle
exert backward on the ground to produce its acceleration if the mass of the motorcycle with rider is 245
kg? (10 pts)
a = 3.50 m/s 2
distance 90 km/h
=
3.50m/62
M =
245g
Using Table 17-4, determine the approximate temperature of metal that has formed a dark blue color.
A positively charged disk has a uniform charge per unit area σ.
dq
R
P
x
The total electric field at P is given by the following.
Ek [2 -
x
(R² + x2) 1/2
Sketch the electric field lines in a plane perpendicular to the plane of the disk passing through its center.
Chapter 8 Solutions
Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics
Ch. 8.2 - By how much does the potential energy change when...Ch. 8.4 - In Example 83, what is the rock's speed just...Ch. 8.4 - Two balls are released from the same height above...Ch. 8 - List some everyday forces that are not...Ch. 8 - You lift a heavy book from a table to a high...Ch. 8 - The net force acting on a particle is conservative...Ch. 8 - When a superball is dropped, can it rebound to a...Ch. 8 - A hill has a height h. A child on a sled (total...Ch. 8 - Why is it tiring to push hard against a solid wall...Ch. 8 - Analyze the motion of a simple swinging pendulum...
Ch. 8 - In Mg. 825, water balloons are tossed from the...Ch. 8 - A coil spring of mass m rests upright on a table....Ch. 8 - What happens to the gravitational potential energy...Ch. 8 - Experienced hikers prefer to step over a fallen...Ch. 8 - (a) Where does the kinetic energy come from when a...Ch. 8 - The Earth is closest to the Sun in winter...Ch. 8 - Can the total mechanical energy E=K+Uever be...Ch. 8 - Suppose that you wish to launch a rocket from the...Ch. 8 - Recall from Chapter 4, Example 414, that you can...Ch. 8 - Two identical arrows, one with twice the speed of...Ch. 8 - A bowling ball is hung from the ceiling by a steel...Ch. 8 - A pendulum is launched from a point that is a...Ch. 8 - Describe the energy transformations when a child...Ch. 8 - Describe the energy transformations that take...Ch. 8 - Suppose you lift a suitcase from the floor to a...Ch. 8 - Repeat Question 23 for the power needed instead of...Ch. 8 - Why is it easier to climb a mountain via a zigzag...Ch. 8 - Figure 829 shows a potential energy curve, U(x)....Ch. 8 - (a) Describe in detail the velocity changes of a...Ch. 8 - Name the type of equilibrium for each position of...Ch. 8 - (I) A spring has a spring constant k of 82.0 N/m....Ch. 8 - (I) A 6.0-kg monkey swings from one branch to...Ch. 8 - (II) A spring with k = 63 N/m hangs vertically...Ch. 8 - (II) A 56.5-kg hiker starts at an elevation of...Ch. 8 - (II) A 1.60-m tall person lifts a 1.95-kg book off...Ch. 8 - (II) A 1200-kg car rolling on a horizontal surface...Ch. 8 - (II) A particular spring obeys the force law F =...Ch. 8 - (II) If U=3x2+2xy+4y2z, what is the force, F?Ch. 8 - (II) A particle is constrained to move in one...Ch. 8 - (II) A particle constrained to move in one...Ch. 8 - (I) A novice skier, starting from rest, slides...Ch. 8 - (I) Jane, looking for Tarzan, is running at top...Ch. 8 - (II) In the high jump, the kinetic energy of an...Ch. 8 - (II) A sled is initially given a shove up a...Ch. 8 - (II) A 55-kg bungee jumper leaps from a bridge....Ch. 8 - (II) A 72-kg trampoline artist jumps vertically...Ch. 8 - The total energy E of an object of mass m that...Ch. 8 - (II) A 0.40-kg hall is thrown with a speed of 8.5...Ch. 8 - (II) A vertical spring (ignore its mass), whose...Ch. 8 - (II) A roller-coaster car shown in Fig. 832 is...Ch. 8 - (II) When a mass m sits at rest on a spring, the...Ch. 8 - (II) Two masses are connected by a string as shown...Ch. 8 - (II) A block of mass m is attached to the end of a...Ch. 8 - (II) A cyclist intends to cycle up a 9.50 hill...Ch. 8 - (II) A pendulum 2.00 m long is released (from...Ch. 8 - (II) What should be the spring constant k of a...Ch. 8 - (III) An engineer is designing a spring to be...Ch. 8 - (III) A skier of mass m starts from rest at the...Ch. 8 - (I) Two railroad cars, each of mass 56,000 kg, are...Ch. 8 - (I) A 16.0-kg child descends a slide 2.20 m high...Ch. 8 - (II) A ski starts from rest and slides down a 28...Ch. 8 - (II) A 145-g baseball is dropped from a tree 14.0...Ch. 8 - (II) A 96-kg crate, starling from rest, is pulled...Ch. 8 - (II) Suppose the roller-coaster ear in Fig. 832...Ch. 8 - (II) A skier traveling 9.0 m/s reaches the fool of...Ch. 8 - (II) Consider the track shown in Fig. 837. The...Ch. 8 - (II) A 0.620-kg wood block is firmly attached to a...Ch. 8 - (II) A 180-g wood block is firmly attached to a...Ch. 8 - (II) You drop a ball from a height of 2.0 m, and...Ch. 8 - (II) A 56-kg skier starts from rest at the top of...Ch. 8 - (II) How much does your gravitational energy...Ch. 8 - (III) A spring (k = 75 N/m) has an equilibrium...Ch. 8 - (III) A 2.0-kg block slides along a horizontal...Ch. 8 - (III) Early lest flights for the space shuttle...Ch. 8 - (I) For a satellite of mass mS in a circular orbit...Ch. 8 - (I) Jill and her friends have built a small rocket...Ch. 8 - Prob. 47PCh. 8 - (II) Show that Eq. 816 for gravitational potential...Ch. 8 - (II) Determine the escape velocity from the Sun...Ch. 8 - (II) Two Earth satellites, A and B, each of mass m...Ch. 8 - (II) Show that the escape velocity for any...Ch. 8 - (II) (a) Show that the total mechanical energy of...Ch. 8 - (II) Take into account the Earths rotational speed...Ch. 8 - (II) (a) Determine a formula for the maximum...Ch. 8 - Prob. 55PCh. 8 - (II) A meteorite has a speed of 90.0 m/s when 850...Ch. 8 - (II) How much work would be required to move a...Ch. 8 - (II) (a) Suppose we have three masses, m1, m2, and...Ch. 8 - (II) A NASA satellite has just observed an...Ch. 8 - (II) A sphere of radius r1 has a concentric...Ch. 8 - Prob. 61PCh. 8 - Prob. 62PCh. 8 - (I) If a car generates 18 hp when traveling at a...Ch. 8 - (I) An 85-kg football player traveling 5.0 m/s is...Ch. 8 - (II) A driver notices that her 1080-kg car slows...Ch. 8 - (II) How much work can a 3.0-hp motor do in 1.0 h?Ch. 8 - (II) An outboard motor for a boat is rated at 55...Ch. 8 - (II) A 1400-kg sports car accelerates from rest to...Ch. 8 - (II) During a workout, football players ran up the...Ch. 8 - (II) A pump lifts 21.0 kg of water per minute...Ch. 8 - (II) A ski area claims that its lifts can move...Ch. 8 - (II) A 75-kg skier grips a moving rope that is...Ch. 8 - (III) The position of a 280-g object is given (in...Ch. 8 - (III) A bicyclist coasts clown a 6.0 hill at a...Ch. 8 - Draw a potential energy diagram, U vs. x, and...Ch. 8 - (II) The spring of Problem 75 has a stiffness...Ch. 8 - (III) The potential energy of the two atoms in a...Ch. 8 - (III) The binding energy of a two-particle system...Ch. 8 - What is the average power output of an elevator...Ch. 8 - A projectile is fired at an upward angle of 48.0...Ch. 8 - Water flows over a clam at the rate of 580kg/s and...Ch. 8 - A bicyclist of mass 75 kg (including the bicycle)...Ch. 8 - A 62-kg skier starts from rest at the top of a ski...Ch. 8 - Repeat Problem 83, but now assume the ski jump...Ch. 8 - A ball is attached to a horizontal cord of length ...Ch. 8 - Show the h must be greater than 0.60 if the ball...Ch. 8 - Show that on a roller coaster with a circular...Ch. 8 - If you stand on a bathroom scale, the spring...Ch. 8 - A 65-kg hiker climbs to the top of a 4200-m-high...Ch. 8 - The small mass m sliding without friction along...Ch. 8 - A 56-kg student runs at 5.0 m/s, grabs a hanging...Ch. 8 - The nuclear force between two neutrons in a...Ch. 8 - A fire hose for use in urban areas must be able to...Ch. 8 - A 16-kg sled starts up a 28 incline with a speed...Ch. 8 - The Lunar Module could make a safe landing if its...Ch. 8 - Proper design of automobile braking systems must...Ch. 8 - Some electric power companies use water to store...Ch. 8 - Estimate the energy required from fuel to launch a...Ch. 8 - Prob. 99GPCh. 8 - Suppose the gravitational potential energy of an...Ch. 8 - (a) If the human body could convert a candy bar...Ch. 8 - Electric energy units are often expressed in the...Ch. 8 - Chris jumps off a bridge with a bungee cord (a...Ch. 8 - In a common test for cardiac function (the stress...Ch. 8 - (a) If a volcano spews a 450-kg rock vertically...Ch. 8 - A film of Jesse Owenss famous long jump (Fig. 849)...Ch. 8 - An elevator cable breaks when a 920-kg elevator is...Ch. 8 - A particle moves where its potential energy is...Ch. 8 - A particle of mass m moves under the influence of...Ch. 8 - Prob. 110GP
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
Examine the graph in Figure 6.3. Note that the growth rate increases slowly until the optimum is reached and th...
Microbiology with Diseases by Body System (5th Edition)
Use the following graph to answer questions 3 and 4. 3. Which of the lines best depicts the log phase of a ther...
Microbiology: An Introduction
Two culture media were inoculated with four different bacteria. After incubation, the following results were ob...
Microbiology: An Introduction
10.71 Identify each of the following as an acid or a base: (10.1)
H2SO4
RbOH
Ca(OH)2
HI
...
Chemistry: An Introduction to General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry (13th Edition)
Choose the best answer to etch of the following. Explain your reasoning. Which of these stars has the largest r...
Cosmic Perspective Fundamentals
17. A speed skater moving to the left across frictionless ice at 8.0 m/s hits a 5.0-m-wide patch of rough ice....
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: A Strategic Approach, Vol. 1 (Chs 1-21) (4th Edition)
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- Consider a closed triangular box resting within a horizontal electric field of magnitude E = 8.02 104 N/C as shown in the figure below. A closed right triangular box with its vertical side on the left and downward slope on the right rests within a horizontal electric field vector E that points from left to right. The box has a height of 10.0 cm and a depth of 30.0 cm. The downward slope of the box makes an angle of 60 degrees with the vertical. (a) Calculate the electric flux through the vertical rectangular surface of the box. kN · m2/C(b) Calculate the electric flux through the slanted surface of the box. kN · m2/C(c) Calculate the electric flux through the entire surface of the box. kN · m2/Carrow_forwardThe figure below shows, at left, a solid disk of radius R = 0.600 m and mass 75.0 kg. Tu Mounted directly to it and coaxial with it is a pulley with a much smaller mass and a radius of r = 0.230 m. The disk and pulley assembly are on a frictionless axle. A belt is wrapped around the pulley and connected to an electric motor as shown on the right. The turning motor gives the disk and pulley a clockwise angular acceleration of 1.67 rad/s². The tension T in the upper (taut) segment of the belt is 145 N. (a) What is the tension (in N) in the lower (slack) segment of the belt? N (b) What If? You replace the belt with a different one (one slightly longer and looser, but still tight enough that it does not sag). You again turn on the motor so that the disk accelerates clockwise. The upper segment of the belt once again has a tension of 145 N, but now the tension in the lower belt is exactly zero. What is the magnitude of the angular acceleration (in rad/s²)? rad/s²arrow_forwardA bridge truss extends x = 217 m across a river (shown in the figure below) where 0 = 40°. The structure is free to slide horizontally to permit thermal expansion. The structural components are connected by pin joints, and the masses of the bars are small compared with the mass of a 1300 kg car at the center. Calculate the force of tension or compression in each structural component (in N). B D T T T T T 22820 AB AC BC ||| || || || BD N ---Select--- N ---Select--- N ---Select--- N ---Select--- DE N ---Select--- T DC= N ---Select--- TEC N ---Select--- с ✓ Earrow_forward
- no ai pleasearrow_forwardA block of mass m₁ = 1.85 kg and a block of mass m₂ is 0.360 for both blocks. 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 m M, R m2 Ꮎ (a) Determine the acceleration of the two blocks. (Enter the magnitude of the acceleration.) m/s2 (b) Determine the tensions in the string on both sides of the pulley. left of the pulley right of the pulley N Narrow_forwardConsider as a system the Sun with Venus in a circular orbit around it. Find the magnitude of the change in the velocity of the Sun relative to the center of mass of the system during the time Venus completes half an orbit. Assume the mass of the Sun is 5.68 x 1029 kg, the mass of Venus is 4.87 × 1024 kg, its period is 1.94 × 107 s, and the radius of its orbit is 1.08 × 1011 m. Ignore the influence of other celestial objects. m/sarrow_forward
- Your physics instructor loves to put on physics magic shows for elementary school children. He is working on a new trick and has asked you, his star physics student, for assistance. The figure below shows the apparatus he is designing. Cup Hinged end - Support stick A small ball rests on a support so that the center of the ball is at the same height as the upper lip of a cup of negligible mass that is attached to a uniform board of length = 1.89 m. When the support stick is snatched away, the ball will fall and the board will rotate around the hinged end. As the board hits the table, your instructor wants the ball to fall into the cup. The larger the angle 0, the more time the elementary school children will have to watch the progress of the trick. But if the angle is too large, the cup may not pull ahead of the ball. For example, in the limiting case of 90°, the board would not fall at all! (a) Your instructor wishes to know the minimum angle 0 (in degrees) at which the support would…arrow_forwardno ai pleasearrow_forward= Consider the schematic of the molecule shown, with two hydrogen atoms, H, bonded to an oxygen atom, O. The angle between the two bonds is 106°. If the bond length r 0.106 nm long, locate the center of mass of the molecule. The mass mH of the hydrogen atom is 1.008 u, and the mass mo of the oxygen atom is 15.9999 u. (Use a coordinate system centered in the oxygen atom, with the x-axis to the right and the y-axis upward. Give the coordinates of the center of mass in nm.) XCM YOM = = H 53° 53° nm nm r Harrow_forward
- An approximate model for a ceiling fan consists of a cylindrical disk with four thin rods extending from the disk's center, as in the figure below. The disk has mass 2.60 kg and radius 0.200 m. Each rod has mass 0.850 kg and is 0.700 m long. HINT (a) Find the ceiling fan's moment of inertia about a vertical axis through the disk's center. (Enter your answer in kg • m².) kg. m² (b) Friction exerts a constant torque of magnitude 0.113 N m on the fan as it rotates. Find the magnitude of the constant torque provided by the fan's motor if the fan starts from rest and takes 15.0 s and 17.5 full revolutions to reach its maximum speed. (Enter your answer in N. m.) N.marrow_forwardA uniform, thin rod hangs vertically at rest from a frictionless axle attached to its top end. The rod has a mass of 0.780 kg and a length of 1.54 m. (Assume a coordinate system where the +y-direction is up and the +x-direction is to the right. The rod is free to swing about the axle in the x- y plane.) (a) You take a hammer and strike the bottom end of the rod. At the instant the hammer strikes, the force it applies to the rod is (15.71) N. What is the acceleration (in m/s²) of the rod's center of mass at this instant? (Express your answer in vector form.) m/s² a = (b) What is the horizontal force (in N) that the axle exerts on the rod at this same instant? (Express your answer in vector form.) F = N (c) The rod then returns to hanging at rest. You again strike the rod with the hammer, applying the same force, but now you strike it at its midpoint. What now is the acceleration of the center of mass (in m/s²) at the instant of impact? (Express your answer in vector form.) m/s² a = (d)…arrow_forwardFind the net torque on the wheel in the figure below about the axle through O perpendicular to the page, taking a = 9.00 cm and b = 23.0 cm. (Indicate the direction with the sign of your answer. Assume that the positive direction is counterclockwise.) N.m 10.0 N 30.0% 12.0 N 9.00 Narrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- University Physics Volume 1PhysicsISBN:9781938168277Author:William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff SannyPublisher:OpenStax - Rice UniversityPhysics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage LearningPrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage Learning
- Classical Dynamics of Particles and SystemsPhysicsISBN:9780534408961Author:Stephen T. Thornton, Jerry B. MarionPublisher:Cengage LearningCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningAn Introduction to Physical SciencePhysicsISBN:9781305079137Author:James Shipman, Jerry D. Wilson, Charles A. Higgins, Omar TorresPublisher:Cengage Learning

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

Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...
Physics
ISBN:9781133939146
Author:Katz, Debora M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning

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

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

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

An Introduction to Physical Science
Physics
ISBN:9781305079137
Author:James Shipman, Jerry D. Wilson, Charles A. Higgins, Omar Torres
Publisher:Cengage Learning
8.01x - Lect 11 - Work, Kinetic & Potential Energy, Gravitation, Conservative Forces; Author: Lectures by Walter Lewin. They will make you ♥ Physics.;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9gUdDM6LZGo;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY