A 62.0-kg survivor of a cruise line disaster rests atop a block of Styrofoam insulation, using it as a raft. The Styrofoam has dimensions 2.00 m × 2.00 m × 0.090 0 m. The bottom 0.024 m of the raft is submerged. (a) Draw a force diagram of the system consisting of the survivor and raft. (b) Write Newton’s second law for the system in one dimension, using B for buoyancy, w for the weight of the survivor, and w r for the weight of the raft. (Set a = 0.) (c) Calculate the numeric value for the buoyancy, B . (Seawater has density 1 025 kg/m 3 .) (d) Using the value of B and the weight w of the survivor, calculate the weight w , of the Styrofoam. (e) What is the density of the Styrofoam? (f) What is the maximum buoyant, force, corresponding to the raft being submerged up to its top surface? (g) What total mass of survivors can the raft support?
A 62.0-kg survivor of a cruise line disaster rests atop a block of Styrofoam insulation, using it as a raft. The Styrofoam has dimensions 2.00 m × 2.00 m × 0.090 0 m. The bottom 0.024 m of the raft is submerged. (a) Draw a force diagram of the system consisting of the survivor and raft. (b) Write Newton’s second law for the system in one dimension, using B for buoyancy, w for the weight of the survivor, and w r for the weight of the raft. (Set a = 0.) (c) Calculate the numeric value for the buoyancy, B . (Seawater has density 1 025 kg/m 3 .) (d) Using the value of B and the weight w of the survivor, calculate the weight w , of the Styrofoam. (e) What is the density of the Styrofoam? (f) What is the maximum buoyant, force, corresponding to the raft being submerged up to its top surface? (g) What total mass of survivors can the raft support?
A 62.0-kg survivor of a cruise line disaster rests atop a block of Styrofoam insulation, using it as a raft. The Styrofoam has dimensions 2.00 m × 2.00 m × 0.090 0 m. The bottom 0.024 m of the raft is submerged. (a) Draw a force diagram of the system consisting of the survivor and raft. (b) Write Newton’s second law for the system in one dimension, using B for buoyancy, w for the weight of the survivor, and wr for the weight of the raft. (Set a = 0.) (c) Calculate the numeric value for the buoyancy, B. (Seawater has density 1 025 kg/m3.) (d) Using the value of B and the weight w of the survivor, calculate the weight w, of the Styrofoam. (e) What is the density of the Styrofoam? (f) What is the maximum buoyant, force, corresponding to the raft being submerged up to its top surface? (g) What total mass of survivors can the raft support?
the cable may break and cause severe injury.
cable is more likely to break as compared to the
[1]
ds, inclined at angles of 30° and 50° to the vertical
rings by way of a scaled diagram. [4]
I
30°
T₁
3cm
3.8T2
cm
200 N
50°
at it is headed due North and its airspeed indicat
240 km/h. If there is a wind of 100 km/h from We
e relative to the Earth? [3]
Can you explain this using nodal analysis
With the nodes I have present
And then show me how many KCL equations I need to write, I’m thinking 2 since we have 2 dependent sources
Chapter 9 Solutions
Student Solutions Manual With Study Guide, Volume 2 For Serway/vuilles College Physics, 10th
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