In the Olympiad of 708 B.C., some athletes competing in the standing long jump used handheld weights called halteres to lengthen their jumps (Fig. 9-56). The weights were swung up in front just before liftoff and then swung down and thrown backward during the flight. Suppose a modem 78 kg long jumper similarly uses two 5.50 kg halteres, throwing them horizontally to the rear at his maximum height such that their horizontal velocity is zero relative to the ground. Let his liftoff velocity be v → = (9.5 i ^ + 4.0 j ^ ) m/s with or without the halteres, and assume that he lands at the liftoff level. What distance would the use of the halteres add to his range? Réunion des Musées Nationaux∕Art Resource Figure 9-56 Problem 43.
In the Olympiad of 708 B.C., some athletes competing in the standing long jump used handheld weights called halteres to lengthen their jumps (Fig. 9-56). The weights were swung up in front just before liftoff and then swung down and thrown backward during the flight. Suppose a modem 78 kg long jumper similarly uses two 5.50 kg halteres, throwing them horizontally to the rear at his maximum height such that their horizontal velocity is zero relative to the ground. Let his liftoff velocity be v → = (9.5 i ^ + 4.0 j ^ ) m/s with or without the halteres, and assume that he lands at the liftoff level. What distance would the use of the halteres add to his range? Réunion des Musées Nationaux∕Art Resource Figure 9-56 Problem 43.
In the Olympiad of 708 B.C., some athletes competing in the standing long jump used handheld weights called halteres to lengthen their jumps (Fig. 9-56). The weights were swung up in front just before liftoff and then swung down and thrown backward during the flight. Suppose a modem 78 kg long jumper similarly uses two 5.50 kg halteres, throwing them horizontally to the rear at his maximum height such that their horizontal velocity is zero relative to the ground. Let his liftoff velocity be
v
→
= (9.5
i
^
+ 4.0
j
^
) m/s with or without the halteres, and assume that he lands at the liftoff level. What distance would the use of the halteres add to his range?
#3) A wagon with boxes of gold having total mass 300 kg, is released from rest 50 m up a 6.0° slope. Dudley Do- Right (mass 75 kg) and his sidekick Ella (mass 60 kg) wait in a tree that is 40 m from the edged of the cliff. They drop vertically into the wagon as it passes beneath them. As soon as they drop into the wagon, they apply the brakes that creates a coefficient of kinetic friction of 0.08 between the wagon and the ground (you can assume the force of friction is negligible before the brakes are enabled). Do Dudley Do-Right and Ella have to jump out of the wagon while it is still moving, or will it stop before coming to the edges of the cliff?
An Acapulco cliff diver in (m = 70.0 kg) jumps 30.0 meters from the top of the cliff toward the ocean below. However, in a freak accident, half-way down 8.00 meters from his launch point, he crashes into a hang glider (total mass 85.0 kg) flying horizontally at 6.5 m/s.
Assuming an inelastic collision and terminal velocity from that point on, how far from the intended entry point do the two hit the ocean, and how fast are they moving?
For simplicity, assume no air drag during the diver's free fall and a value of g = 10 m/s2.
6). In the figure, a stationary block explodes into two pieces L and R that slide across a frictionless floor and then into regions with friction, where they stop. Piece L, with a mass of 2.4 kg, encounters a coefficient of kinetic friction ?L = 0.40 and slides to a stop in distance dL = 0.15 m. Piece R encounters a coefficient of kinetic friction ?R = 0.55 and slides to a stop in distance dR = 0.36 m. What was the mass of the block?
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