PAUL STANLEY
INSTRUCTOR’S SOLUTIONS MANUAL
PEO Lh
Aas
FIFTH EDITION OTT a
DAVID HALLIDAY
ROBERT RESNICK
KENNETH KRANEINSTRUCTOR’S SOLUTIONS MANUAL
PAUL STANLEY
Beloit College
to accompany
Volume One
Physics
Fifth Edition
DAVID HALLIDAY
University of Piusburgh
ROBERT RESNICK
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
KENNETH KRANE
Oregon State University
®
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10987654
Printed and bound by Vietor Graphics, ne.A Note To The Instructor.
‘The solutions here are somewhat brief, as they are designed for the instructor, not for the student.
Check with the publishers before electronically posting any part of these solutions; website, ftp, or
server access must be restricted to your students.
T have been somewhat casual about subscripts whenever it is obvious that a problem is one
dimensional, or that the choice of the coordinate system is irrelevant to the numerical solution.
Although this does not change the validity of the answer, it will sometimes obfuscate the approach
if viewed by a novice.
‘There are some traditional formula, such as
A= v8, + ase,
which are not used in the text. The worked solutions use only material from the text, s0 there may
be times when the solution here seems unnecessarily convoluted and drawn out. Yes, I know an
easier approach existed. But if it was not in the text, I did not use it here.
| also tried to avoid reinventing the wheel. ‘There are some exercises and problems in the text
which build upon previous exercises and problems. Instead of rederiving expressions, I simply refer
you to the previous solution.
Tadopt a different approach for rounding of significant figures than previous authors; in partic-
ular, T usually round intermediate answers. As such, some of my answers will differ from those in
the back of the book.
Exercises and Problems which are enclosed in a box also appear in the Student’s Solution Manual
with considerably more detail and, when appropriate, include discussion on any physical implications
of the answer. These student solutions carefully discuss the steps required for solving problems, p
out the relevant equation numbers, or even specify where in the text additional information can be
found. When two almost equivalent methods of solution exist, often both are presented. You are
encouraged to refer students to the Student's Solution Manual for these exercises and problems.
However, the material from the Student's Solution Manual must not be copied.
Paul Stanley
Beloit College
[email protected]E1-1 (a) Megaphones; (b) Microphones; (c) Decacards (Deck of Cards); (d) Gigalows (Gigolos);
(¢) Terabulls (Terribles); (f) Decimates; (g) Centipedes; (h) Nanonanettes (?); (i) Picoboos (Peek-a-
Boo); (j) Attoboys ('atta boy); (k) Two Hectowithits (To Heck With It); (1) Two Kilomockingbirds
(To Kill A Mockingbird, or Tequila Mockingbird).
E1-2 (a) $36, 000/52 week = $692/week. (b) $10,000, 000/(20 x 12 month) = $41,700/month. (c)
30 x 10°/8 = 3.75 x 10°.
Ei-3] Multiply out the factors which make up century.
365 aa) (3 a)
T year T day
minutes
T hour
1 century = 100 years|
This gives 5.256 x 10” minutes in a century, so a microcentury is 52.56 minutes.
‘The percentage difference from Fermi’s approximation is (2.56 min)/(50 min) x 100% or 5.12%.
E1-4 (3000 mi)/(3 hr) = 1000 mi/timezone-hour. There are 24 time-zones, so the circumference
is opproximately 24 x 1000 mi = 24,000 miles.
E1-5 Actual number of seconds in a year is
(2 min 7
(865.25 days) (Ge) (Far some) (Se = 9.1558 x 107s,
The percentage error of the approximation is then
3588) 107s
1508 5 10" — = o.45'
E1-6 (a) 10-® seconds per shake means 10* shakes per second. There are
365 days)) (24 2) 60 ni) 60s
Tyear ) \iday) Thr ) \Tmin
This means there are more shakes in a second.
(b) Humans have existed for a fraction of
3.1536 x 10” s/year.
110° years/10™ years = 10~*
‘That fraction of a day is
1074 (24 (i = (= = 8.645.
Ei-7] We'll assume, for convenience only, that the runner with the longer time ran exactly one
mile, Let the speed of the runner with the shorter time be given by v1, and call the distance actually
ran by this runner dy. ‘Then v1 = di/ty. Similarly, v2 = da/ta for the other runner, and d2 = 1 mile.
We want to know when v; > v2. Substitute our expressions for speed, and get s/t > da/ta.
Rearrange, and di/d2 > t1/t2 or di/dz > 0.99937. Then di > 0.99937 mile x (5280 feet /1 mile) or
dy > 5276.7 feet is the condition that the first runner was indeed faster. The first track can be no
more than 3.3 feet too short to guarantee that the first runner was faster.E1-8 We will wait until a day’s worth of minutes have been gained. That would be
The clock gains one minute per day, so we need to wait 1,440 days, or almost four years. Of course,
if itis an older clock with hands that only read 12 hours (instead of 24), then after only 720 days
the clock would be correct,
'E1-9] First find the “logarithmic average” by
log tay 5 (log(5 x 107) + log(6 x 1075),
log (5 x 101" x 6 x 10-1),
1% 3000 — tog ( 75000)
Solve, and tay 54.8 seconds.
E1-10 After 20 centuries the day would have increased in length by a total of 20x 0.0018 = 0.028.
The cumulative effect would by the product of the average increase and the number of days; that
average is half of the maximum, so the cumulative effoct is }(2000)(365)(0.02s) = 7300s. That’s
about 2 hours.
E1-11 Lunar months are based on the Earth’s position, and as the Earth moves around the orbit
the Moon has farther to go to complete a phase. In 27.3 days the Moon may have orbited through
360°, but since the Earth moved through (27.3/365) x 360° = 27° the Moon needs to move 27°
farther to catch up. That will take (27°/360°) x 27.3 days = 2.05 days, but in that time the Earth
‘would have moved on yet farther, and the moon will need to catch up again. How much farther?
(2.05/365) x 360° = 2.02 which means (2.02°/360°) x 27.3 days = 0.153 days. The total so far is
2.2 days longer; we could go farther, but at our accuracy level, it isn’t worth it
E1-12 (1.9m)(3.281 ft/1.000m) = 6.2 ft, or just under 6 feet, 3 inches.
E1-13 (a) 100 meters = 328.1 feet (Appendix G), or 928.1/3 = 10.9 yards. This is 28 feet longer
than 100 yards, or (28 ft)(0.3048 m/ft) = 8.5m. (b) A metric mile is (1500 m)(6.214%10~4 mi/m) =
0.932 mi. I'd rather run the metric mile.
El-14 There are
365.25 days), (24 br) (60 min / 60s 3
900,000 years rae \ = ) (SE Os.) = 95 x 105
‘that will elapse before the cesium clock is in error by 1 s. This is almost 1 part in 10"°, This kind
of accuracy with respect to 2572 miles is
10-*9(2572 mi) ( ase
#22) sanE1-15] The volume of Antarctica is approximated by the area of the base time the height; the
area of the base is the area of a semicircle. Then
v= An= (fxr) a,
3
‘The volume is
v > ies
(200m
L.88 x 1026 198s
Tm
) = 1.88 x 10? em?
E1-16 The volume is (77% 10m?)(26m) = 2.00% 10" m?. This is equivalent to
(2.00% 107 m8)(10-$ km/m)* = 0.02 km?
E1-17 (a) C= 2nr = 2n(6.37 x 10° km)
.00 x 104 km. (b) A= dar? = 4 (6.37 x 10° km)? =
5.10 x 10° km. (e) V = $2(6.37 x 10° km)?
1.08 x 10}? km’.
E1-18 The conversions: squirrel, 19 km/br(1000 m/kra),/(3600 s/hr)
rabbit, 30 knots(1.688ft/s/knot) (0.9048 m/f) = 15m/s;
snail, 0.030 mi/hir(1609 m/mi)/(3600 s/hr) = 0.013 m/s;
spider, 1.8 ft/s(0.3048 m/f) = 0.55 m/s;
cheetah, 1.9 km/min(1000 m/km)/(60 s/min) = 32m/s;
human, 1000 em/s/(100 cm/m) = 10m/s;
fox, 1100 m/min/(60 s/min) = 18 m/s;
lion, 1900 kin/day(1000 m/km)/(86,400 s/day) = 22m/s.
‘The order is snail, spider, squirrel, human, rabbit, fox, lion, cheetah,
m/s
EL-19] One light-year is the distance traveled by light in one year, or (3 x 10° m/s) x (1 year)
Then
1o.20)™ ight-year (12) @ 10 x
2005 (Taaoemey= cm) (me) sins) (Toate
which is equal to 0.00286 light-vear/contury.
E1-20 Start with the British units inverted,
gal ‘ain (260024 L) ( mt
30.0 mi (“gal in 1609 km
) 7.84 x 10-? L/km.
E1-21 (b) A light-year is
(885 days) = 9.46 x 10"? km,
(8.00 x 10° km/s) (= 3) aa ta
Thr ) \i day
A parsec is
) = 2.00 «10° im,
1.50 x 10° km /_360° 505108 i 360°
OO \Qnrad 2a ad
nye
(a) (1.5 x 10° km) /(3.09 x 10" kin/pe = 4.85 x 10-8 pe. (1.5 x 10* km)/(9.46 x 10!? km/ly) =
1.59 x 10-8 lyE1-22 First find the “logarithmic average” by
logday = 5 (log(2 x 10°) + tog(t x 10°"),
J gg (2 101 10-4),
Flog x10! = log (V2 107)
Solve, and day = 450 km.
E1-23] The number of atoms is given by (1 kg)/(1.00783 x 1.661 x 10-2 kg), or 5.974 x 10°°
atoms.
1-24 (a) (2 x 1.04 16)u(1.661 x 10-2%kg) = 3.0 x 10-kg
(b) (1.4 x 102kg)/(8.0 x 10-?%kg) = 4.7 x 108 molecules.
E1-25 The coffee in Paris costs $18.00 per kilogram, or
(0.4536 kg)
siscong (288
) =ssi6m
It is cheaper to buy coffee in New York (at least according to the physics textbook, that is.)
1-26 The room volume is (21 x 13 x 12)ft°(0.3048 m/ft)* = 92.8m°. The mass contained in the
room is
(92.8m°)(1.21 kg/m?) = 112g.
E1-27] One mole of sugar cubes would have a volume of N'4 x 1.0 cm®, where N4 is the Avogadro
constant. Since the volume of a cube is equal to the length cubed, V = [°, then | = /Na cm
=84x 107 om.
E1-28 The number of seconds in a week is 60 x 60 x 24 x 7 = 6.05 x 10°. The “weight” loss per
second is then
(0.23 kg)/(6.05 x 10°s) = 3.80 x 10-* mg/s.
E1-20] The definition of the meter was wavelengths per meter; the question asks for meters per
wavelength, so we want to take the reciprocal. The definition is accurate to 9 figures, so the reciprocal
should be written as 1/1, 650, 763.73 = 6,05780211 x 10-? m = 605.780211 nm.
E1-30 (a) 37.76 + 0.132 = 37.89. (b) 16.264 ~ 16.26325 = 0.001
1-31] The easiest approach is to first solve Darcy’s Law for K, and then substitute the known
ST units for the other quantities. Then
which can be simplified to m/s.1-32 The Planck length, Jp, is found from
fie] = (eI@*]IA%,
L = arr yaner
LE 84 Deep in 2 ky Fe
Equate powers on each side,
L:1 = i+3j+2k,
T:0 = ~i-2j-k,
MO = ~j+k.
Then j =k,.and i= 3k, and 1 = 2k; so k= 1/2, j = 1/2, and i = ~3/2, Then
(ie) = le I1eV7]09),
(8.00 x 108 m/s)~*/2(6.67 x 10-# m$/s? - kg)"/?(6.63 x 10-4 kg - m?/s)"/2,
4.05 x 107% m.
E1-33 The Planck mass, mp, is found fron
[e'J[G*][a*),
(r-)7-M}))QML2T-F,
[este p25 kya,
[mp]
M
‘Equate powers on each side,
LG = i4+3j+2k,
Tos 2k,
Mil = -j+k
Then k= j +1, and i= -3j— 1, and 0 = —1+ 2k; s0 k= 1/2, and j
bmp] [eer 0/7),
= (3.00 x 10° m/s)'/7(6.67 x 10-*! m°/s? - kg)~"/2(6,63 x 10-* kg - m?/s)!/?,
= 5.46 x 10-8kg.
1/2, and i= 1/2, Then
P1-1] There are 24 x 60 = 1440 traditional minutes in a day. The conversion plan is then fairly
straightforward
822.8 dec. min
F000 deo caim) = 1184.8 trad, min,
(1440 trad. si)
‘This is traditional minutes since midnight, the time in traditional hours can be found by dividing
by 60 min/hr, the integer part of the quotient is the hours, while the remainder is the minutes. So
the time is 19 hours, 45 minutes, which would be 7:45 pm.
P1-2 (a) By similar triangles, the ratio of the distances is the same as the ratio of the diameters—
390:1.
(b) Volume is proportional to the radius (diameter) cubed, or 390° = 5.93 x 107.
(c) 0.52°(2r/360°) = 9.1 x 10° rad. The diameter is then (9.1 x 10- rad)(3.82 x 10 km) =
3500 km.P1-3 (a) The circumference of the Earth is approximately 40,000 km; 0.5 seconds of an arc is
0.5/(60 x 60 x 360) = 3.9 x 10-? of a circumference, so the north-south error is +(3.9 x 10°7)(4 x
10? m) = +15.6m. This is a range of 31 m.
(b) The east-west range is smaller, because the distance measured along a latitude is smaller than
the circumference by a factor of the cosine of the latitude. Then the range is 31 cos 43.6° = 22m.
(©) The tanker is in Lake Ontario, some 20 km off the coast of Hamlin?
P1-4 Your position is determined by the time it takes for your longitude to rotate underneath”
‘the sun (in fact, that’s the way longitude was measured originally as in 5 hours west of the Azores...)
the rate the sun sweep over at equator is 25,000 miles/86,400 s = 0.29 miles/second. The correction
factor becatise of latitude is the cosine of the latitude, so the sun sweeps overhead near England at
approximately 0.19 mi/s. Consequently a 30 mile accuracy requires an error in time of no more than
(30 mi) /(0.19 mi/s) = 158 seconds.
‘Trip takes about 6 months, so clock accuracy needs to be within (158s)/(180 day) = 1.2 sec-
onds/day.
(b) Same, except 0.5 miles accuracy requires 2.6 s accuracy, so clock needs to be within 0.007
s/éay!
P1-5 Let B be breaths/minute while sleeping. Each breath takes in (1.43 g/L)(0.3 L) = 0.429 g;
and lets out (1.96 g/L)(0.3 L) = 0.288 g. The net loss is 0.141 g. Multiply by the number of breaths,
(8 hr)(60 min. /hr) B(0.141 g) = B(67.68 g). I'll take a short nap, and count my breaths, then finish
the problem.
I'm back now, and I found my breaths to be 8/minute. So I lose 541 g/night, or about 1 pound.
P1-6 ‘The mass of the water is (1000 kg/s1°)(5700m*) = 5.7 x 10° kg, ‘The rate that water leaks
drains out is
(5.7 x 0g)
“12 hr)(3600 s/h)
PI-7] Let the radius of the grain be given by ry. Then the surface area of the grain is Ay
‘and the volume is given by V, = (4/3)xr3.
If N grains of sand have a total surface arca equal to that of a cube 1m on a edge, then
NA, = 6 m?. The total volume V; of this number of grains of sand is NV. Eliminate N from these
‘two expressions and get
Then Vj = (2 m?)(50 x 10-® m)
‘The mass of a volume V; is given by
P1-8 For a cylinder V = mr2h, and A = 2nr? + 2nrh. We want to minimize A with respect to
changes in r, s0
PAL 4 (apy? 4 2nr¥
ae FAG a *)
v
dar — 25
Set this equal to zero; then V = 2nr®, Notice that h = 2r in this expression.P1-9 (a) The volume per particle is
(9.27 x 107*kg)/(7870 kg/m) = 1.178 x 10-%m3,
‘The radius of the corresponding sphere is
- [3.178 x 10-78)
Double this, and the spacing is 282 pm.
(b) The volume per particle is
(8.82 x 10-**kg)/(1013kg/m*) = 3.77 x 10-*m’.
141 x 107m,
‘The radius of the corresponding sphere is
STE
(ee 9.0910".
Double this, and the spacing is 416 pm.
P1-10 (a) The area of the plate is (8.43 cm)(5.12 cm) = 43.2 em?. (b) (8.14)(8.7 em)? = 43 cm?E21] Add the vectors as is shown in Fig. 2-4. If @ has length a = 4 m and b has length b= 3 m
then the sum is given by 8. The cosine law can be used to find the magnitude s of &,
8 =a +8 — 2abcos8,
where @ is the angle between sides a and b in the figure,
(a) (7 m)? = (4 m)? + (3 m)? ~ 2(4 m)( m) c0s8, so cos = —1.0, and @ = 180°. This means
that @ and b are pointing in the same direction.
(b) (1 m)? = (4 m)? + (8 m)? 2(4 m)(3 m) ¢0s8, 50 cos@ = 1.0, and 6 = 0°, This means that
& and b are pointing in the opposite direction.
(c) (5 m)* = (4 m)? + (3 m)? — 2(4 m)(8 m) 0080, so cosd = 0, and @ = 90°. This means that @
and b are pointing at right angles to each other.
(a) Consider the figures below.
(b) Net displacement is 2.4 km west, (5.23. = 2.1) km south. A bird would fly
V2.42 + 2.1? km = 3.2 km.
Consider the figure below.
ath, b
E2-4 (a) The components are (7.34) cos(252°) = —2.27i and (7.34) sin(252°) = ~6.98j.
(b) The magnitude is 25)? + (43)? = 50; the direction is @ = tan~1(43/— 25) = 120°. We
did need to choose the correct quadrant.
[E2-5] The components are given by the trigonometry relations
O = Hsind = (3.42 km) sin35.0°
.96 km
A= Hoos = (3.42 kin) c0835.0° = 2.80 km.
9‘The stated angle is measured from the east-west axis, counter clockwise from east. So O is measured
against the north-south axis, with north being positive; A is measured against east-west with east
being positive.
Since her individual steps are displacement vectors which are only north-south or east-west, she
must eventually take enough north-south steps to equal 1.96 km, and enough east-west steps to
equal 2.80 km. Any individual step can only be along one or the other direction, so the minimum
total will be 4.76 km.
E26 Let # = 124i km and f
) km. Then the ship needs to travel
Af =F; - # = (51.41 + 31.4j) km.
Ship needs to travel VBI47+ S14? km = 60.2 km in a direction @ = tan="(31.4/51.4) = 31.4° west
of north.
E2-7] (a) In unit vector notation we need only add the components; &+b = (51+3))+(-31+2))
(6 3)i+ (3-+2)j = 21+ 5).
(b) If we define ¢ = & +B and write the magnitude of € as ¢, then e = \/2 +4 = V2FE =
5.39, The direction is given by tan = c,/¢z which gives an angle of 68.2°, measured counterclock-
wise from the positive a-axis.
E28 (a) @+b=(4-1)i+(-3+1)§+(1 +4)
(b) @-B = (4—-1)1+ (-3- 1] +00 -4)k = 2 .
(©) Rearrange, and € = b — a, or b— @ = (~1~4)i+ (1 - -3)j + (4—1)k = -8i+4j + 3k.
E2-9 (a) The magnitude of a is 07+ (—3.0) = 5.0; the direction is @ = tan-1(—3.0/4.0) =
323°,
(b) The magnitude of b is V6.0? + 8.0" = 10.0; the direction is @ = tan~*(6.0/8.0) = 36.9°.
(c) The resultant vector is 2+ 6 = (4.0 + 6.0)i+ (-3.0+8.0)j. The magnitude of & + is
Vaan ay + (5.0)! = 11.2; the direction is @ = tan~1(6.0/10.0) = 26.
(d) The resultant vector is d- 6 = (4.0 — 6.0)i + (-3.0 - 8.0)j. The magnitude of
{-2.0)? + (-11.0}? = 11.2; the direction is @ = tan~(—11.0/ — 2.0) = 260°,
(e) The resultant vector is B — & = (6.0 — 4.0)i + (8.0 - —3.0)j. The magnitude of B
/{2.0)F + (11.0)? = 11.2; the direction is @ = tan=#(11.0/2.0) = 79.7",
11.2, ay = (12.7) sin(28.2°) =
(12.7) sin( 133°) = 9.29. Then
E2-10 (a) Find components of @; ag = (12.7) cos(28.2°)
Find components of b; be = (12.7) cos(133°) = -8.66, by
2.54i + 15.29).
a+b = (11.2 - 8.66)i + (6.00 + 9.29)}
(b) The magnitude of # is /2.547 + 15.297
(c) The angle is @ = tan~¥(15.29/2.54)
5.5.
E2-11 Consider the figure below.
102-12 Consider the figure below.
E2-13] Our axes will be chosen so that i points toward 3 O'clock and j points toward 12 O'clock,
(e) ;
‘The two relevant positions are = (11.3 cm)i and #
11.3 cm)j. Then
AF = f-i
(11.3 em)j — (11.3 em)i.
(b)
‘The two relevant positions are now f; = (11.3 cm)j and # = (-11.3 cm)j. Then
AF = fr-fi
= (11.3 em)j - (-11.3 cm)j
= (226 cm)j.
©) . 7
‘The two relevant positions are now # = (—11.3 cm)j and # = (—11.3 em)j. Then
AF = %-%
(-11.3 cm)j — (-11.3 cm)j
= (@cm)j.
2-14 (a) The components of f, are
ye = (4:13) 008(225°) = -2.92m
and
Py = (4.13) sin(225°) = -2.92m.
u‘The components of # are
Te = (5.26m) cos(0°) = 5.26m
and
The components of #% are
and
iy = (6.94m) sin(64.0°) = 5.34,
(b) The resulting displacement is
[(-29 +5.26 + 2.60)i + (-2.92 +0 45.34)§] m = (4.941 + 2.49))
(c) The magnitude of the resulting displacement is VA947 +242 m = 5.5m. The direction of
the resulting displacement is @ = tan-1(2.42/4.94) = 26.1°. (d) To bring the particle back to the
starting point we need only reverse the answer to (c); the magnitude will be the same, but the angle
will be 206°.
E2-15 The components of the initial position are
‘riz = (12,000 ft) e08(40°) = 9200 ft
Tay = (12, 000 ft) sin(40°) = 700 ft.
‘The components of the final position are
Taz = (25,8000 ft) cos(163°) =
Tay = (25, 800 ft) sin(
The displacement is
F=%-m= {(-24,700 — 9, 200)i + (7, 540 — 9,200))] = (-339001 — 16609) ft.
E2-16 (a) The displacement vector is 8 here positive 2 is east and positive
is north. The magnitude of the displacement is //(410)?-+ (820)? mi = 920 mi. The direction is
6 = tan™"(—820/410) = 300°.
(b) The average velocity is the displacement divided by the total time, 2.25 hours. Then
‘Vay = (180i — 3609) mi/hr.
(c) The average speed is total distance over total time, or (410 +820) /(2.25) mi/hr = 550 mi/hr.
12E217] (a) Evaluate # when t = 2s.
F = ((2 m/s*)t — (6 m/s)t}i+ ((6 m) — (7 m/s*)e‘]j
(@ m/s*)(2 5)? ~ 5 m/s)(2 s+ (6 m) ~ (7 m/s!)(25)*Ih
[(16 m) — (10 m)ji + {(6 m) (112 m)]j
(6 mpli + [-(206 mh.
(b) Evaluate:
va [(2 m/s*)3e? = (5 m/s)}i + [-(7 m/s*)4e?]j
[(6 m/s°)t? — (5 m/s) |i + [-(28 m/s*)e}j.
nto this last expression we now evaluate #(¢ = 2.8) and get
¥ = [6 m/s*)(2 5)? - (5 m/s)fi + [-(28 m/s*)(2 8)°]j
{(24 m/s) ~ (6 m/s)}i + [-(224 mn/s)]j
[29 m/s)]i + [-(224 m/s)}i,
for the velocity ¥ when t= 2.5.
(©) Evaluate
a= = (6 m/s*)2¢}i + [-(28 m/s*)307j
[(12 m/s*)efi + [-(84 m/s*)]j.
Into this last expression we now evaluate &(t = 2s) and get
& = [(12 m/s°)(28)fi + [-(84 m/s*)(2 2)°Ij
((24 mm/s*)]i + [-(36 m/s?)
av
a
E218 (a) Let ui point north, j point east, and k point up. The displacement is (8.71 + 9.7] +
2.9k) km. The average velocity is found by dividing each term by 3.4 hr; then
Yae = (2.61 + 2.9) + 0.85) km/hr.
‘The magnitude of the average velocity is V267 + 2.9? + 0.85" kan /hi
(b) The horizontal velocity has a magnitude of V2.6? + 2.9% km/hr
the horizontal is given by @ = tan~?(0.85/3.9) = 13°.
0 km/hr.
9 km/hr. The angle with
E2-19 (a) The derivative of the velocity is
& = [(6.0 m/s?) — (8.0m/s*)t]i
80 the acceleration at t = 3s is d = (—18.0m/s?)i. (b) The acceleration is zero when (6.0 m/s?) —
(8.0m/s®)t = 0, or t = 0.758. (c) The velocity is never zero; there is no way to “cancel” out the
y component, (d) The speed equals 10m/s when 10 = y/v2 +82, or ve = +46.0m/s. This happens
when (6.0m/s?) ~ (8.0m/s*)t = £6.0m/s, or when t = 0s.
132-20 If v is constant then so is v? = v2 + v2. Take the derivative;
d da
Doe te + Bey Fy = Babe + ty):
But if the value is constant the derivative is zero.
2-21] Let the actual flight time, as measured by the passengers, be T. There is some time
ifference between the two cities, call it AT = Namulevu time - Los Angeles time. The AT will be
positive if Namulevu is east of Los Angeles. The time in Los Angeles can then be found from the
time in Namulevu by subtracting AT.
"The actual time of flight from Los Angeles to Namulevu is then the difference between when the
plane lands (LA times) and when the plane takes off (LA time):
T = (18:50 - AT) — (12:50)
= 6:00-AT,
where we have written times in 24 hour format to avoid the AM/PM issue. The return flight time
can be found from
T = (1850)- (1:
17:00+ AT,
‘where we have again changed to LA time for the purpose of the calculation.
(b) Now we just need to solve the two equations and two unknowns.
1700+4T = 6:00-AT
-Ar)
2AT = 6:00-17:00
AT = ~5:30.
Since this is a negative number, Namulevu is located west of Los Angeles.
(a) T = 6:00 — AT = 11 : 30, or eleven and a half hours.
(©) The distance traveled by the plane is given by d = vt = (520 mi/hr)(11.5 hr) = 5980 mi.
‘We'll draw a circle around Los Angeles with a radius of 5980 mi, and then we look for where it
intersects with longitudes that would belong to a time zone AT away from Los Angeles. Since the
Earth rotates once every 24 hours and there are 360 longitude degrees, then each hour corresponds
to 15 longitude degrees, and then Namulevu must be located approximately 15° x 5.5 = 83° west of
Los Angeles, or at about longitude 160 east. ‘The location on the globe is then latitude 5°, in the
vicinity of Vanuatu,
‘When this exercise was originally typeset the times for the outbound and the inbound fights were
inadvertently switched. I suppose that we could blame this on the airlines; nonetheless, when the answers
were prepared for the back of the book the reversed numbers put Nemulevu east of Los Angeles. That would
put it in either the North Atlantic or Brazil.
2-22. There is a three hour time zone difference. So the flight is seven hours long, but it takes
3 br 51 min for the sun to travel same distance. Look for when the sunset distance has caught up
with plane:
unset Fpianes
Veunset(t — 1:35) = Uplenet
(t-1:35)/3:51 = t/7:
so t = 3:31 into flight.
14E2-238
(112 km /hr)(1'8)/(3600 s/hr) = 31m,
2-24 The time taken for the ball to reach the plate is
d__ (184m)
= 3 = (60 km/h)
(8600 s /ar)/(1000 m kam) = 0.414.
2-25] Speed is distance traveled divided by time taken; this is equivalent to the inverse of the
slope of the line in Fig. 2-32, The line appears to pass through the origin and through the point
(1600 km, 80 x 10° y), 80 the speed is v = 1600 km/80 x 10° y= 2x 10-° km/y. Converting,
1000 m’ (2 cm
2cm/y
Tk Tm
v=2x 20°F /y(
E2-26 (a) For Maurice Greene vay = (100m)/(9.81m) = 10.2m/s. For Khalid Khannouchi,
(26.219 mi) ex ( thr
ev = (2.0950 br) \T mi) \ 36008.
) = 5.594 m/s.
(b) If Maurice Greene ran the marathon with an average speed equal to his average sprint speed
then it would take him
(2210 mi (160m ( os
Timi
or 1 hour, 9 minutes.
E2-27 The time saved is the difference,
(700 km) (700 km)
(685 km/hr) (10456 kane)
about 1 hour 13 minutes.
A
which i
2-28 The ground elevation will increase by 35 m in a horizontal distance of
2 = (35.0m)/tan(4.3°) = 465m.
‘The plane will cover that distance in
t
(0.465 km) (36008
(1300 kin he) (3) as
2-29] Let v, = 40 km/hr be the speed up the hill, t; be the time taken, and d; be the distance
traveled in that time, We similarly define v2 = 60 km/hr for the down bill trip, as well as ¢2 and da.
Note that da = dy
18v1 = di/ty and v2 = dz/ta. vas = d/t, where d total distance and t is the total time. The total
distance is dy + dy = 2dy. The total time ¢ is just the sum of ty and t, so
Bn + bia
—_—*
Vert 1]e2"
‘Take the reciprocal of both sides to get a simpler looking expression
2 1a
2etyl
Yer
‘Then the average speed is 48 km/hr.
E2-30 (a) Average speed is total distance divided by total time. Then
240 ft) ++(240 ft)
oo = BAO RTC.O/8) + B40 HYTO RTS) ~ "8
(b) Same approach, but different information given, so
uy = (GOI(.0F/s) + (60-8)(10 Ys) 7 9 jg
(608) + (608)
2-31 The distance traveled is the total area under the curve. The “curve” has four regions: (I)
8 triangle from 0 to 2 s; (II) a rectangle from 2 to 10 s; (III) a trapezoid from 10 to 12 s; and (IV)
a rectangle from 12 to 16 s.
‘The area underneath the curve is the sum of the areas of the four regions.
d= 3(28)(8m/s) + (8.08)(8m/s) + J29)(8m/s +41m/s) + (4.08)(4m/s) = 100m.
2-32 The acceleration is the slope of a velocity-time curve,
(8m/s) — (4m/s)
(0s) — (128)
-2m/s?,
E2-33] The initial velocity is ¥ = (18 m/s)i, the final velocity is ¥¢ = (-30 m/s)i. The average
‘acceleration is then
a 4 —30 m/s)i ~ (18 m/s)i
ae 246
which gives da, = (—20.0 m/s?)i.
16E2-34 Consider the figure below.
2-35 (a) Upto A v, > 0 and is constant, From A to B ve is decreasing, but still positive. From
B to C vg =0. From C to D ve <0, but |ve| is decreasing,
(b) No. Constant acceleration would appear as (part of) # parabola; but it would be challenging
to distinguish between a parabola and an almost parabola.
2-36 (a) Up to A ve > 0 and is decreasing. From A to B v, = 0. From B to C v, > 0 and is
inereasing. From C to D vz > 0 and is constant,
(b) No. Constant acceleration would appear as (part of) a parabola; but it would be challenging.
to distinguish between a parabola and an almost parabola,
E237] Consider the figure below.
E2-38 Consider the figure below.
7‘The acceleration
is aconstant
2 emis during
the entire time
ioral.
B2-39 (a) A must have units of m/s?. B must have units of m/s°.
(b) The maximum positive x position occurs when ve = 0, 80
= 2At 3B
implies vz = 0 when either t = 0 or t = 24/3B = 2(3.0m/s?)/3(1.0m/s®) = 2.08.
(c) Particle starts from rest, then travels in positive direction until
2s, a distance of
(3.0m/s?)(2.08)? ~ (1.0m/s*)(2.08)° = 4.0m.
Then the particle moves back to a final position of
& = (3.0m/s*)(4.08)? — (1.0m/s*)(4.08) =
‘The total path followed was 4.0m + 4.0m +16.0m = 24.0m.
(4) The displacement is ~16.0m as was found in part (c).
(©) The velocity is ve = (6.0m/s*)t — (3.0m/s*)t2. When t = 0, vz = 0.0m/s. When t= 1.08,
3.0m/s. When t = 2.0s, ve = 0.0m/s. When t = 3.08, ve = -9.0m/s. When t = 40s,
24.0 m/s.
(£) The acceleration is the time derivative of the velocity,
a= Be = (6.0m/s*) — (6.0m/s9)t.
6.0m/s?, When t = 1.08, ay
12.0m/s*. When t = 4.05, ag = —18.0m/s?
(8) The distance traveled was found in part (a) to be ~20m The average speed during the time
interval is then vay = (—20m)/(2.08) = —10m/s.
.08, dz = ~6.0m/s?.
E2-40 wm, = 0, ve = 360 km/hr = 100m/s. Assuming constant acceleration the average velocity
will be
tay = j(100m/s +0) = 50m/s.
‘The time to travel the distance of the runway at this average velocity is
= (1800m)/(50m/s) = 36s.
‘The acceleration is
az = 22/t? = 2(1800 m)/(36.08)? = 2.78 m/s”.
18E241] (a) Apply Eq. 2-26,
Ue = Yost Gxt,
(3.0 x 10” m/s) (0) + (9.8 m/s)t,
3.1 10° s t.
(b) Apply Ea. 2-28 using an initial position of zo = 0,
1
= motte + 50st",
e
"
(0) + (0) + $9.8 m/s#)(@.1 x 10° 8),
2 = 47x10 m.
u
E242 vg: = 0 and ve = 27.8m/s. Then
t = (vs — vo2)/a = ((27.8m/s) — (0)) /(50m/s*) = 0.56s.
T want that car.
E2-43 The muon will travel for t seconds before it comes to a rest, where ¢ is given by
= (ve — te)/a= ((0) ~ (6.20 x 10°m/s)) /(—1.30 x 10*m/s2) = 4 x 107%.
‘The distance traveled will be
gt? + tat = (1.30 x 10!4m/s2)(4 x 10-4)? + (6:20 « 10%m/s)(4 x 10-%s) = 0.104
2
E2-44 ‘The average velocity of the electron was
ten 50. 5 x 108 m/s +5.8 x 10° m/e) = 3.0 x 10°m/s.
‘The time to travel the distance of the runway at this average velocity is
# = (0.012m)/(3.0 x 10° m/s) = 4.0 x 10-%s.
The acceleration is
Gz = (Ue — vpz)/t = ((5.8 x 10° m/s) ~ (1.5 x 10° m/s))/(4.0 x 10°® s) = 1.4 x 10'5m/s?.
E2-45] It will be easier to solve the problem if we change the units for the initial velocity,
Jan (1000 m) nr m
von = 10205 ( Tn ) (Geet) ag
and then applying Eq. 2-26,
ve = the + ast,
(0) = (283 m/s) +a,(145),
-202 m/s? = ag.
‘The problem asks for this in terms of g, 60
=202 m/s? { —2 2,
a mye (; Sma) 9
19E2-46 Change miles to feet and hours to seconds. Then v, = 81 ft/s and toe = 125 ft/s. ‘The
time is then
t= (81 ft/s) — (125 ft/s)) /(—17 ft/s?) =
6s.
B2-47 (a) The time to stop is
£ = ((0 m/s) ~ (24.6 m/s)) (4.92 m/s*) = 5.008.
(b) The distance traveled is
lie -
2 = 54st? + oust = 5
4.02 m/s*)(5.005)* + (24.6 m/s)(6.00s) = 62m.
2-48 Answer part (b) first. The average velocity of the arrow while decelerating is
yaw = 5((O) + (260 fr/s)) = 180 fe,
‘The time for the arrow to travel 9 inches (0.75 feet) is
t= (0.75 ft)/(130 ft/s) = 5.8 x 10-%s,
(a) The acceleration of the arrow is then
day = (8 ~ voy) /t = ((O) ~ (260 f/5))/(6.8 x 107%)
5 x 108 ft/s?
E2-49] The problem will be somewhat easier if the units are consistent, so we'll write the maxi-
‘um speed as
f& (min fe
wo (min) _ 67H
min & *) ve 8
(a) We can find the time required for the acceleration from Eq. 2-26,
de = te tart,
(16.7 ft/s) = (0) + (4.00 fe/s*)t,
418s = ¢
And from this and Eq 2-28 we can find the distance
i
2+ tor + 5a0t,
bates 2
2 = 0) +0) + Soo a/s(AI8 97,
2 = M9f.
(b) The motion of the elevator is divided into three parts: acceleration from rest, constant speed
motion, and deceleration to a stop, The total distance is given at 624 ft and in part (a) we found
the distance covered during acceleration was 34.9 ft. By symmetry, the distance traveled during
deceleration should also be 34.9 ft. The distance traveled at constant speed is then (624 ~ 34.9 —
34.0) ft = 554 ft. ‘The time required for the constant speed portion of the trip is found from Ea
2-22, rewritten as
Ac sh4ft _ 4,
ee aye es
‘The total time for the trip is the sum of times for the three parts: accelerating (4.18 s), con
speed (33.2 s), and decelerating (4.18 s). The total is 41.6 seconds.
202-50 (a) The deceleration is found from
2 2
a, = Glew!) = a pa (4 m) — (16m/s)(4.0s)) = —3.75 m/s?
(b) The impact speed is
Ue = Vor + Gzt = (16m/s) + (-3.75m/s")(4.08) = 1.0m/s.
E2-51 Assuming the drops fall from rest, the time to fall is
a [2H = [2 2T00m)
a 8m /s
The velocity of the falling drops would be
‘vy = ayt = (-9.8m/s*)(198) = 190 m/s,
or about 2/8 the speed of sound.
19s.
E2-52 Solve the problem out of order.
(b) The time to fall is
2y _ [2-120m) _ 49,
ea Sine) ~ *°
(2) The speed at which the elevator hits the ground is
-9.8m/s*)(4.98) = 48m/s,
Uy = ay)
(4) The time to fall half-way is
ay [ 2=60m)_
‘ fE- ToBmjery = 35°
(c) The speed at the half-way point is
9.8 m/s*)(3.58)
wy =at= 34m/s,
'E2-53] The initial velocity of the “dropped” wrench would be zero. T choose vertical to be along
the y axis with up as positive, which is the convention of Eq. 2-29 and Eq, 2-30. It: turns out that
it is much easier to solve part (b) before solving part (a)
(b) We solve Eq. 2-29 for the time of the fall.
ty = vy ah
(-24.0 m/s) (0) — (9.8 m/s”)t,
2458 =
(8) Now we can use Eq, 2-30 to find the height from which the wrench fll.
y
(0) = ww + (0245 5) — 510.8 m/s?)(2.45 5),
0 = - 294m
4
1
yo + tot — 39",
0
We have set y = 0 to correspond to the final position of the wrench: on the ground. This results in
‘an initial position of yo = 29.4 m; it is positive because the wrench was dropped from a point above
where it landed.
22-54 (a) It is easier to solve the problem from the point of view of an object which falls from the
highest point, The time to fall from the highest: point is
oy _ [ 2(-53.Tm)
(2am 3
‘The speed at which the object hits the ground is
vy = ayt = (9.81 m/s?)(3.31.8) = -32.5 m/s.
But the motion is symmetric, so the object must have been launched up with a velocity of vy =
32.5 m/s.
(b) Double the previous answer; the time of flight is 6.62 s.
E2-55 (a) The time to fall the first 50 meters is
260mm) _
(b) The total time to fall 100 meters is
_ fe. [Pay _
Va, ~ ¥ Coan) —*
The time to fall through the second 50 meters is the difference, 1.3 s
2-56 The rock returns to the ground with an equal, but opposite, velocity. The acceleration is
then
ay = ((~14.6m/s) ~ (14.6 m/s))/(7.72s) = 3.78m/s?.
‘That would put them on Mercury.
Solve Eq. 2-30 for the initial velocity. Let the distances be measured from the ground
Y= Wott 590,
(0) + vp (2.25 8) — 30. 8 m/s*)(2.25 8),
368m = 1)(2.25s) 248m,
274 m/s = ty
(0) Solve Bq. 2-29 for the velocity, using the result from part (a.
wy = ey st,
y (27.4 m/s) — (9.8 m/s*)(2.25 8),
wy = 54 m/s.
() We need to solve Eq, 2-30 to find the height to which the ball rises, but we don’t know how
Jong it takes to get there. So we first solve Eq. 2-29, because we do know the velocity at the highest
point (vy = 0).
%y = ty — at
(27.4 m/s) — (9.8 m/s”)t,
2And then we find the height to which the object rises,
lie
Y= wot out 500,
4
y
y
This is the height as measured from the ground; so the ball rises 38.3 36.8 = 1.5 m above the point
specified in the problem,
(0) + (27-4 m/s)(2.8 5) - 500 8 m/s2)(2.8 9)
383m,
B2-58 ‘The time it takes for the ball to fall 2.2 m is,
ie fz 2(-2.2m)
a VC 98m/=)
The ball hits the ground with a velocity of
ty = ayt = (-9.8m/s*)(0.67s) = -6.6m/s.
‘The ball then bounces up to a height of 1.9 m. It is easier to solve the falling part of the motion,
and then apply symmetry. The time is would take to fall is
2(-1.9m)
t= | 62s,
‘The ball hits the ground with a velocity of
vy = ayt = (-9.8m/s")(0.628) = -6.1m/s.
But we are interested in when the ball moves up, 60 vy = 6.1m/s.
‘The acceleration while in contact with the ground is
ay = ((6.1m/s) — (—6.6 m/s))/(0.096s) = 130 m/s*.
E2-59 The position as a function of time for the first object is
1
bot,
wn
‘The position as a function of time for the second object is
‘The difference,
Ay =v —u = fracl2g ((2s)t-1),
528.
is the set equal to 10m, so t =
E2-60 Answer part (b) first:
(b) Use the quadratic equation to solve
1
(-81.8m) = 5 (-9.81 m/s*)¢? + (12.4m/s)t
2
for time, Get t = —3.0s and t = 5.535. Keep the positive answer.
(a) Now find final velocity from
(-9.8m/s*)(5.538) + (12.4m/s) = —41.8m/s.
23,E261] The total time the pot is visible is 0.54 s; the pot is visible for 0.27 5 on the way down.
‘Well define the initial position as the highest point and make our measurements from there. Then
vo = 0 and toy = 0. Define ty to be the time at which the falling pot passes the top of the window
yi, then t2 = ty + 0.27 s is the time the pot passes the bottom of the window yz = yi ~ 1.1 m. We
have two equations we can write, both based on Eq. 2-30,
1
ta = vo + vot ~ path,
n = O+On- jot
and
be
1
2
n-Lim = (0+ ()t— fol +0275),
Isolate y in this last equation and then set the two expressions equal to each other so that we can
solve for t1,
1 s
pol = 1m fol +0278),
-} = 1m—Folth + [0549 +0073 5%),
0 = lim 3a(0-54 sits + 0.073
This last line can be directly solved to yield t; = 0.28 s as the time when the falling pot passes the
top of the window. Use this value in the fist equation above and we can find yy = ~}(9.8 m/s?)(0.28
s)? = -0.38 m. The negative sign is because the top of the window is beneath the highest point, s0
the pot must have risen to 0.38 m above the top of the window.
P21 (a) The net shift is /(2m)' + (17m?) = 28m.
(b) The vertical displacement is (17m) sin(52°) = 13m.
P2-2 Wheel “rolls” through half of a turn, or ar = 141m, The vertical displacement is 27 =
0.90m. ‘The net displacement is
Jain)? + (0.9m)? = 1.67 m0
‘The angle is
o=
an—1(0,90 m)/(1.41 m) = 33°.
[P2-3] We align the coordinate system so that the origin corresponds to the starting position of
the fy and that all positions inside the room are given by positive coordinates.
(@) The displacement vector can just be written,
AF = (10 i+ (12 ft)j + (14 fe)k.
(b) The magnitude of the displacement vector is [Af] = VIO" + 127+ 1# ft= 21 ft.(c) The straight line distance between two points is the shortest possible distance, so the length
of the path taken by the fly must be greater than or equal to 21 ft.
(4) If the fly walks it will need to cross two faces. The shortest path will be the diagonal across
these two faces. If the lengths of sides of the room are ly, l2, and Js, then the diagonal length across
two faces will be given by.
VGrhe +8,
where we want to choose the J, from the set of 10 ft, 12 ft, and 14 ft that will minimize the length.
‘The minimum distance is when ; = 10 ft, ly = 12 ft, and ls = 14. Then the minimal distance the
fly would walk is 26 ft.
P2-4 Choose vector & to lie on the x axis, Then & = ai and b = bl + byj where bz = beos@ and
by = bsin8. The sum then has components
Te =a+bc080 and ry = bsind.
Then
= (a+beos6)? + (bsind)?,
a + 2abcos 6 +b,
P2-5 (a) Average speed is total distance divided by total time. Then
35.0 mni/lar) (t/2) + (55.0 mi/be)(t/2)
SENET = 450 ihe.
(b) Average speed is total distance divided by total time. Then
Ye (ap) + (422) 42.8 mi/br.
* (@/B/(85.0 mi/hr) + (4/2)/(55.0 mi/br)
c) Average speed is total distance divided by total time. Then
dtd
(45.0 mai far) + (a) (42.8 mai 7h
P2-6 (a) We'll do just one together. How about t = 2.08?
(3.0 m/s) (2.08) + (-4.0m/s?)(2.08)? + (1.0m/s*)(2.0) = -2.0m.
The rest of the valley are, starting from t=0, @ = 0.0 mi, 0.0 sn, 2.0 m, 0.0 m, and 12.0 m.
(b) Always final minus initial. The answers are r¢— 2
2.0m—0.0m = 2.0m and 2 — =
120m ~ 0.0 m =12.0m.
() Always displacement divided by (chase in) inne.
: 208) —nom/s
= ow
i= *) —oomys,
0.08)
25P27] (a) Assume the bird has no size, the trains have some separation, and the bird is just
leaving one of the trains. The bird will be able to fly from one train to the other before the two
trains collide, regardless of how close together the trains are. After doing so, the bird is now on the
other train, the trains are still separated, so once again the bird can fly between the trains before
they collide. This process can be repeated every time the bitd touches one of the trains, so the bird
will make an infinite number of trips between the trains.
(b) The trains collide in the middle; therefore the trains collide after (51 km)/(34 km/hr) = 1.5
hr. The bird was flying with constant speed this entire time, so the distance flown by the bird is (58
Jn /hr)(1.5 hr) = 87 km,
P28 (a) Start with a perfect square:
(i-myr — 0,
vp +R 2vlv2,
(op +Ug)tite > Qvivatite,
G+Qt+ (pt tte > dtd} + 2uivatite,
(oft + oBta)(tr +) > (dr +2),
viti+ tit, dtd
dy +d, htt’
vidi + vad | uit + unt
ath 7* “hth
Actually, it only works if d; + dz > 0!
(b) fy =u.
P29 (a) The average velocity during the time interval is vay = Az/At, or
ey = BEE AF BOS) (1.50 cm/s%)1054/(16) =
(b) 3(1.50 em/s))(28)?
© 3(1.50 cm/s*)(38)?
(a) = 3(1.50 em/s*)(2.5s)? = 28.1 cm/s.
(€) The midway position is (xe +:)/2, or
Zmia = A+ Bi(3s) + (28)*)]/2 = A+ (17.58°)B.
This occurs when t = ¢/(17.58%). The instantaneous velocity at this point is
dz/dt = 3Bt? = 3(1.50 cm/s*)(4/(17.58))? = 30.3 cm/s.
P2-10 Consider the figure below.
1 jeeeera eueria : 1 \
26(a) The average velocity is displacement divided by change in time,
_ (2.0 m/s*)(2.0 s)$ — (2.0 m/s*)(1.0 8)? _ 14.0 m
~ (2.08) — (108) 10s
‘The average acceleration is the change in velocity. So we need an expression for the velocity, which
is the time derivative of the position,
14.0 m/s.
From this we find average acceleration
(6.0 nti 0 s)? ~ (6.0 m/s*)(1.0 s)? _ 18.0 m/s = 180 m/e.
) 1
(b) The instantaneous velocities can be found directly from v = (6.0 m/s?)#?, so v(2.0 s) = 24.0
1n/s and v(1.0 s) = 6.0 m/s. We can get an expression for the instantaneous acceleration by taking
the time derivative of the velocity
one eo m/ty =
‘Then the instantaneous accelerations are a(2.0 s) = 24.0 m/s? and a(1.0 s) = 12.0 m/s?
(©) Since the motion is monotonic we expect the average quantities to be somewhere between
the instantaneous values at the endpoints of the time interval. Indeed, that is the case.
yy
12.0 m/s®)t.
2-12 Consider the figure below.
a(mn/s"2) vam) x(m)
1s 15
10 50 j
3 25 ~
° ° —
0246810 0246810 0246810
©) us) 1)
P2138 Start with vy = v4 + at, but vy =0, 80 4 =
at, then
= Ja? +t = at? — a =
2
80 t= /—2e/a = y/~2(19.2 ft)/(—32 ft/s?) = 1.108. Then 4
Converting,
35.2 ft/s(1/5280 mi/ft)(3600 s/h) = 24 mi/h,
(82 ft/s?)(1.108) = 35.2 ft/s.
27P2-14 (b) The average speed during while traveling the 160 m is
ay = (33.01m/s + 54.0m/s)/2 = 43.5 m/s.
The time to travel the 160 m ist (160m)/(43.5m/s) = 3.688.
(a) The acceleration is
2x 24 _ 2(160m) _ 2(33.0m/s)
= Goss)?” B68s)
(c) The time required to get up to a speed of 33 m/s is
t= v/a = (33.0m/s)/(5.69m/s*) = 5.80s.
(€) The distance moved from start is
69 m/s?
a= dat? = 1(6,69m/s*)(5.805)? = 95.7m,
amin
P2-15 (a) The distance traveled during the reaction time happens at constant speed; trac = d/v =
(15m)/(20m/s) = 0.758.
(0) The braking distance is proportional to the speed squared (look at the numbers!) and in
this case is drain = 02/(20:n/s?). ‘Then dorate = (25 m/s)? /(20m/s?) = 31.25m, The reaction time
distance is drece = (251m/s)(0.75s) = 18.75m. The stopping distance is then 50 m.
P2-16 (a) For the car ze = a¢t?/2. For the truck x, = vst. Set both 2 to the same value, and
then substitute the time from the truck expression:
© act?/2=ag(z/m)?/2,
= 2v.?/ag = 2(9.5m/s)?/(2.2m/s) = 82m,
(b) The speed of the car will be given by ve = act, or
Ye = dct = dctt/v, = (2.2mn/s)(82m)/(9.5m/s) = 19m/s.
P2-17] The runner covered a distance di in a time interval ty during the acceleration phase and
4 distance d in a time interval t2 during the constant speed phase. Since the runner started from
rest we know that the constant speed is given by v = at, where a is the runner's acceleration.
The distance covered during the acceleration phase is given by
ay = hath
2
‘The distance covered during the constant speed phase can also be found from
da = vty = atts,
‘We want to use these two expressions, along with dy + dy = 100 m and tp = (12.2 s) ~ ty, to get
100m = dy +d = al? tah (1228-4),
— fot? + 0(12.2 6),
—(1.40 m/s*)t? + (34.2 m/s)ty.
28This last expression is quadratic in ty, and is solved to give ty = 3.40s or ty = 21.08. Since the race
only lasted 12.2 s we can ignore the second answer.
(b) The distance traveled during the acceleration phase is then
dy = Fath = (1.40 m/s?(6.408)? = 162m.
P2-18 (a) The ball will return to the ground with the same speed it was launched. Then the total
time of fight is given by
(ug — 4)/9 = (-25m/s — 25 m/s)/(9.8 m/s)
(b) For small quantities we can think in terms of derivatives, so
5 = (6v4 — 501)/a,
or T = 2e/g.
‘P2-19 Use y = ~gt?/2, but only keep the absolute value. Then yso = (9.8m/s?)(0.05s)?/2
1.2 em; yoo = (9.8m/s?)(0.108)?/2 = 4.9 cm; yiso = (9.8m/s?)(0.15s)?/2 = 11 cm; yao0
(9.8m/s?)(0.20s)?/2 = 20 em; yaso = (9.8m/s*)(0.25s)?/2 = 31 cm.
‘P2-20 The truck will move 12m in (12m)/(55 km/h) = 0.785s. The apple will fall y=
~(9.81 m/s*)(0.785s)?/2 = -3.02m.
o8/2=
221] The rocket travels a distance d; = }at? = }(20 m/s”)(60 s) = 36, 000 m during the accel-
eration phase; the rocket velocity at the end of the acceleration phase is = (20 m/s”)(60 s) =
1200 m/s. The second half of the trajectory can be found from Eqs. 2-29 and 2-30, with yo = 36,000
m and uy = 1200 m/s.
(a) The highest point of the trajectory occurs when vy = 0, 90
y =
(0) =
12s
his time is used to find the height to which the rocket rises,
1
Y= wot Voyt— 590,
(36000 m) + (1200 m/s)(1228) — Fos m/s?)(122 8)?
110000 m.
(b) The easiest way to find the total time of fight is to solve Eq. 2-30 for the time when the
rocket has returned to the ground, Then
1
Y= wt ryt 590
(0) = (36000 m) + (1200 m/s)t = fos m/2y2.
This quadratic expression has two solutions for ¢; one is negative so we don't need to worry about
it, the other is ¢ = 270s. This is the free-fall part of the problem, to find the total time we need to
add on the 60 seconds of accelerated motion. The total time is then 330 seconds.P2-22 (a) The time required for the player to “fall” from the highest point a distance of y = 15 em
is \/2y79; the total time spent in the top 15 cm is twice this, or 2y/2y/9 = 2,/2(0.15 m)/(9.81 m/s) =
0.350.
(b) The time required for the player to “fall” from the highest point a distance of 76 cm is
YHl076m}/(G.5T m/s} — 0.894, the time roquired for the player to fall from the highest pot &
distance of (76 — 15 = 61) cm is /2(0.61m)/g = 0.3535. The time required to fall the bottom 15
cm is the difference, or 0.041 s. The time spent in the bottom 15 cm is twice this, or 0.081 s.
P2-23 (a) The average speed between A and B is vay = (v +v/2)/2 = 3v/4. We can also write
Var = (8.0m)/At = 30/4. Finally, v/2 = v—gAt. Rearranging, v/2 = gt. Combining all of the
above,
$9(#82%) oreo
Then v = /(8.0m)(9.8m/s*) = 8.85 m/s,
(b) The time to the highest point above B is v/2 = gt, so the distance above B is
v(v)_ 2
+3 (3) -<
Then y = (8.85m/s)*/(8(0.8m/s2)) = 1.00m.
P2-24 (a) The time in free fall is t = /—2y/g = /—2[—145 m) (9.81 m/s) = 5.44.
(b) The speed at the bottom is v = —gt = —(9.81m/s*)(5.448) = -63.4m/s.
(c) The time for deceleration is given by v = —25gt, or t = —(~53.4m/s)/(25 x 9.81 /s2) =
0.218s. The distance through which deceleration occurred is
700 + vt = (128m/s*)(0.2185)? + (63.4 m/s)(0.2188) = 5.80.
Find the time she fell from Eq. 2-30,
(Of) = (144 ) + (Ot — 3 fe/s?)e,
which is a simple quadratic with solutions t = +3.0 s. Only the positive solution is of interest. Use
this time in Eq. 2-29 to find her speed when she hit the ventilator box,
‘vy = (0) — (32 ft/s)(3.0 5) = -96 ft/s.
This becomes the initial velocity for the deceleration motion, so her average speed during deceleration
is given by Eq. 2-27,
1
= 5 (Hy + 0p) = 5 (0) + (-96 ft/s) = ~48 ft/s.
‘This average speed, used with the distance of 18 in (1.5 ft), can be used to find the time of deceleration
vay = Ay/At,
and putting numbers into the expression gives At = 0.031 s. We actually used Ay = —1.5 ft, where
the negative sign indicated that she was still moving downward. Finally, we use this in Eq. 2-26 to
find the acceleration,
(-96 ft/s) + a(0.031 8),
which gives a = +3100 ft/s. In terms of g this is a = 97%, which can be found by multiplying
through by 1 = 9/(32 ft/s#)..
30P2-26 Let the speed of the disk when it comes into contact with the ground be vy; then the
average speed during the deceleration process is 1/2; so the time taken for the deceleration process
is ty = 2d/n, where d= —2mm. But d is also give by d = at}/2+ vith, 80
30s (2) a (24) = 24,
ub
2 \u 7
or u? = ~200gd. The negative signs are necessary!
‘The disk was dropped from a height h = -y and it first came into contact with the ground when
it had a speed of 1. Then the average speed is 1/2, and we can repeat most of the above (except
a= ~g instead of 100g), and then the time to fall is tz = 2y/v1,
a9 (4) 5, (Ww
(2) +n
or vf = ~2gy. The negative signs are necossary.
Equating, y = 100d = 100(-2mm) = —0.2m, 90 h = 0.2m. Note that although 1009's sounds
like plenty, you still shouldn’t be dropping your hard disk drive!
P2-27 Measure from the feet! Jim is 2.8 cm tall in the photo, so 1 cm on the photo is 60.7
cm in real-life. Then Jim has fallen a distance y1 = ~3.04m while Clare has fallen a distance
2 = ~5.77m. Clare jumped first, and the time she has been falling is ta; Jim jumped seconds, the
time he has been falling is t) = t2 - At. Then y2 = —gt3/2 and y: = —gt2/2, or ta = 21/9 =
V=2-5.77 m)/(9.81 m/s?) = 1.088 and ty = /=2y1/9 = y/—2(3.04m)/(9.81 m/s") = 0.798. So
Jim waited 0.29.
P2-28 (a) Ascuming she starts from rest and has a speed of » when she opens her chute, then
her average speed while falling freely is v1 /2, and the time taken to fall yy = ~52.0m is th = 2n/m.
Her speed v; is given by v; = —gti, or v? = —2gy,. Then v, = —/—2(9.81m/s*)(—62.0m) =
—31.9m/s. We must use the negative answer, because she fall down! “The time in the air is then
t= y-2ui/o = J -262.0m)/(9.81 m/s4) = 3.265,
Her final speed is v = —2.90:m/s, 90 the time for the deceleration is ty = (v2 —v:)/a, where
a= 2.10m/s?. Then tz = (-2.90m/s ~ ~31.9m/s)/(2.10m/s*) = 13.8.
Finally, the total time of flight is t = ti + tz = 3.268 + 13.88= 17.15.
(b) The distance fallen during the deceleration phase is
Gr0m/F) a55, s)? + (-31.9m/s)(13.8s) = -240m.
‘The total distance fallen is y = vi +u2
falling down.
52.0m—240m = —292m. It is negative because she was
P2-29 Let the speed of the bearing be v1 at the top of the windows and v at the bottom.
‘These speeds are related by v2 = v1 ~ gta, where tia = 0.1258 is the time between when the
bearing is at the top of the window and at the bottom of the window. ‘The average speed is
ay = (Us + va)/2-= v1 ~ gtra/2. The distance traveled in the time tia is yi = ~1.20m, s0
M2 = Varta vitie— gtfe/2,
and expression that can be solved for 1 to yield
waatotty/2 _ [=1.20m) + (981m/s*)(0.1258)2/2
~ the i (0.15 ~
8.99%n/s
31‘Now that we know t we can find the height of the building above the top of the window. ‘The time
the object has fallen to get to the top of the window is t; = —v1/9 = -(~8.99 m/s) /(9.81 m/s"
0.916m.
‘The total time for falling is then (0.916s) + (0.125s) +(1.0s) = 2.048, Note that we remembered
to divide the last time by two! The total distance from the top of the building to the bottom is then
~gt2/2 = ~(9.81 m/s*)(2.048)?/2 =
4m,
P2-30 Each ball falls from a highest point through a distance of 2.0m in
t= V=220m)/(9.8m/5) = 0.639.
The time each ball spends in the air is twice this, or 1.28s. The frequency of tosses per ball is the
reciprocal, f = 1/T' = 0.781s~!. There are five ball, so we multiply this by 5, but there are two
hands, so we then divide that by 2. The tosses per hand per second then requires a factor 5/2, and
the tosses per hand per minute is 60 times this, or 117.
'P2-31] Assume each hand can toss n objects per second. Let 7 be the amount of time that any
one object is in the air. Then 2nr is the number of objects that are in the air at any time, where
the 2” comes from the fact that (most?) jugglers have two hands. We'll estimate n, but 7 can be
found from Eq. 2-30 for an object which falls a distance h from rest:
= A+ (O%- Loe,
solving, t= /2h/9. But r is twice this, because the object had to go up before it could come down.
So the number of objects that can be juggled is
Any 27g
We estimate n = 2 tosses/second. So the maximum number of objects one could juggle to a height
‘h would be
3.6/h/meters.
P2-32 (a) We need to look up the height of the leaning tower to solve this! Ifthe height is h = 56m,
then the time taken to fall a distance h = —y1 is ti = /-2y,/9 = /—2(—56m)/(0.81 m/s?) = 3.43.
The second object, however, has only fallen a a time tz = ti — At = 3.35, so the ae the second
object falls is ya = ~gt3/2 = ~(9.81 m/s?)(3.38)?/2 = 53.4. The difference is 11 — yz = 2.9m.
(o) If the vertical separation is Ay = 0.011, then we can approach this problem in terms of
differentials,
by = atét,
80 6¢ = (0.01 m)/{((9.81 m/s*)(3.4s)] = 310-48,
P2-33 Use symmetry, and focus on the path from the highest point downward. Then Aty = 2ty,
where ty is the time from the highest: point to the upper level. A similar expression exists for
the lower level, but replace U with L. The distance from the highest point to the upper level is
wy = ~gti,/2 = —9(Aty/2)?/2. ‘The distance from the highest point to the lower level is y,
~9t},/2 = ~9(Atz /2)?/2. Now H = yy ~ yz = —gAt2,/8 — —gAt4 /8, which can be written as
___8H
9” Raa,
32E3-1_ The Earth orbits the sun with a speed of 29.8 km/s. The distance to Pluto is 5900% 10° km.
The time it would take the Earth to reach the orbit of Pluto is
(5900 x 10° km)/(29.8 km/s) = 2.0% 108s,
or 6.3 years!
E32 (a) a= F/m= (3.8N)/(5.5ke)
(b) t= vr/a = (6.2m/s)/(0.69m/s? .
(©) 2 = at?/2 = (0.69m/s?)(7.5s)?/2 = 20m.
[E3-3] Assuming constant acceleration we can find the average speed during the interval from Eq.
2m
vane = 3 (Ue + Ue) = 5 ((.8%108 m/s) + (0) = 2.95108 m/s.
From this we can find the time spent accelerating from Eq. 2-22, since Az = vay,2At. Putting in
the numbers At = 5.17x10~®s. The acceleration is then
Ave _ (5.8x10° m/s) ~ (0)
Galt 10-%
1x10"m/s*
‘at (GltTx
The net force on the electron is from Eq. 3-5,
Dh =maz
3-4 The average speed while decelerating is vay = 0.7% 10%m/s. The time of deceleration is
t= 2/ vay = (1.0x 10-4m) /(0.7 x 10"m/s) = 1.4x10-!s. The deceleration is a = Av/t = (~1.4x
10?ma/s)/(1.4x10-" 8) = -1.0x10%m/s?, The force is F = ma = (1.67x10~7kg)(1.0x10%m/s!
ITN.
(9.11x107kg)(1.1 x 10!%m/s?) = 1.010"! N.
ESS] The net force on the sled is 92 N-90 N=
directions. Then
UF _ (@N)
1N; subtract because the forces are in opposite
a,
8.0x10"2m/s?
3-6 53 km/hr is 14.7m/s. The average speed while decelerating is vay = 7.4m/s. The time
of deceleration is t = 2/vgy = (0.65m)/(7.4m/s) = 88x 10s. The deceleration is a = Avu/t =
(-14.7 m/s)/(8.8x10-? s) = —17x102m/s?. The force is F = ma = (39kg)(1.7x102m/s?) = 6600N.
E3-7_ Vertical acceleration is a = F/m = (4.5% 10~¥°N)/(9.11 x 10-"kg) = 4.9 10!m/s?. The
electron moves horizontally 33 mm in a time ¢ = 2/ve = (0.033m)/(1.2 x 10"m/s) = 2.8x10-%s.
The vertical distance deflected is y = at®/2 = (4.9.x 10!%m/s?)(2.8x 10-® s)2/2 = 1.9.x 10-2m.
EB-8 (a) a= F/m = (29N)/(930kg) = 3.110-? m/s?
(b) 4 = at? /2 = (3.1x10-? m/s?)(864005)?/2 = 1.2x 108 m.
(c) v= at = (8.1x 10"? m/s*)(86400) = 2700m/s.E3-9] Write the expression for the motion of the first object as > Fz = myare and that of the
second object as 5 F, = maaae. In both cases there is only one force, F, on the object, so > Fe = F.
‘We will solve these for the mass as mi = F/a; and mz = F/az. Since a1 > a2 we can conclude that
ma > m;
(a) The acceleration of and object with mass mz —my under the influence of a single force of
magnitude F would be
1
= gam ~ Flaa— Fla ~ 178 30m)8*)—1/20m/)"
which has a numerical value of a = 4.55 m/s.
(b) Similarly, the acceleration of an object of mass mz +1 under the influence of a force of
magnitude F would be
1 a
Taz +Tax ~ 1/(8.30m/s*) + 1/(020m/s)"
which is the same as part (a) except for the sign change. Then a = 2.59 m/s?
E3-10 (a) The required acceleration is a= v/t O.1e/t. The required force is F = ma = 0.1me/t.
Then
F =0.1(1200x 10° kg)(3.00x 10%m/s) /(2.59x 10°s) = 1.4 10°N,
and
F =0.1(1200 x 10° kg)(8.00%10°m/s)/(5.18% 10%) = 6.9 105N,
(b) The distance traveled during the acceleration phase is 21 = at?/2, the time required to
travel the remaining distance is tz = 22/v where 22 = d— 21. d is 5 light-months, or d = (3.00%
10°m/s)(1.30%10"s) = 3.9010!'m. Then
2d - at?
d-m 2d vty
=t, ty
ps At SE A+
taht
If ty is 3 days, then
(8.90 105m) — (3.00x 107m/s) (2.59x10°s)
t= (2.59% 10%s) + 00x 107m)
1.30x 108s = 4.12 yr,
if ty is 2 months, then
5m) — (8.00 107
t= (6.18% 10%) + 208.90%10! Ye Gx na 88h)
1.33% 108s = 4.20 yr,
E3-11] (a) The net force on the second block is given by
DOF = maz, = (3.8kg)(2.6 m/s?) = 9.9N.
There is only one (relevant) force on the block, the force of block 1 on block 2.
(b) There is only one (relevant) force on block 1, the force of block 2 on block 1. By Newton's
third law this force has a magnitude of 9.9. N. Then Newton's second law gives SF, = -9.9
N= miaie = (4.6 kg)aie. $0 ate = ~2.2 m/s? at the instant that a2, = 2.6 m/s?
E3-12 (a) W = (5.00 Ib)(4.448N/Ib) = 22.2N;
(b) W = (240 Ib)(4.448 N/Ib)
(©) W = (3600 1b)(4.448N/Tb)
W/g = (22.2N)/(9.81 m/s?) = 2.26 kg.
1070 N)/(9.81 m/s?) = 109 kg.
(16000 N) /(9.81 m/s?) = 1630 kg.3-13 (a) W = (1420.00 Ib)(4.448N/Ib) = 6320N; m = W/g = (6320N)/(9.81 m/s")
(b) m= 412kg; W = mg = (412kg)(9.81 m/s?) = 4040N.
G44 kg.
E8-14 (a) W = mg = (75.0kg)(9.81 m/s") = 736N.
(75.0kg)(3.72m/s*) = 279N.
(c) W = mg = (75.0kg)(0m/s*) = ON.
(d) The mass is 75.0 kg at all locations.
‘£3-15] If g = 9.81 m/s?, then m = W/g = (26.0 N)/(9.81 m/s?) = 2.65 kg.
(@) Apply W = mg again, but now g = 4.60 m/s?, so at this point W = (2.65 kg)(4.60 m/s?) =
12.2.
(b) If there is no gravitational force, there is no weight, because g = 0. There is still mass,
however, and that mass is still 2.65 kg.
E3-16 Upward force balances weight, so F = W = mg = (12000kg)(9.81 m/s?) = 1.2 10°N.
E3-17 Mass is m= W/o; net force is F = ma, or F = Wa/g. Then
F (3900 Ib)(13 ft/s”) /(32 ft/s”) = 1600 Ib.
EB-18 a= Av/At = (450m/s)/(1.82s) = 247 m/s?. Net force is F = ma (528kg)(247 m/s?) =
1.29 10N.
E3-19] YF, = 2(1.4x10° N) = may. Then m 1.22X10° kg and
W = mg = (1.22 10°kg)(9.81 m/s") = 1.20x 10°N.
3-20 Do part (b) frst; there must be a 10 Ib force to support the mass. Now do part (a), but
cover up the left hand side of both pictures. If you can't tell which picture is whieh, then they must
both be 10 Ib!
3-21 (b) Average speed during deceleration is 40 km/h, or 11 m/s. The time taken to stop the
car is then t = #/vgy = (61m)/(11 m/s) = 5.6s.
(@) The deceleration is a = Av/At = (22m/s)/(5.6s) = 3.9m/s*. The braking force is F =
ma = Wa/g = (13, 000N)(3.9 m/s?) /(9.81 m/s?) = 5200N.
(a) The deceleration is same; the time to stop the car is then At = Av/a = (11m/s)/(3.9m/s*) =
288,
(c) The distance traveled during stopping is z = vayt = (5.6m/s)(2.88) = 16m.
E3-22 Assume acceleration of free fall is 9.81 m/s? at the altitude of the meteor. The net force is
Fret = ma = (0.25 kg)(9.2m/s?) = 2.30. The weight is W = mg = (0.25 kg)(9.81 m/s?) = 2.45N.
‘The retarding force is Fase — W’ = (2.3N) ~ (2.45N) = -0.15N,
3-23] (a) Find the time during the “jump down” phase from Eq. 2-30.
(0m) = (0.48 m) + (4 — 310.8 m/s),
which is a simple quadratic with solutions t = +£0.31 s. Use this time in Eq. 2-29 to find his speed
when he hit ground,
(0) — (9.8 m/s*)(0.31 s) = -3.1 m/s.
35(0+ 009) = 3 (+ (84 m/s)) = -1.6 m/s
‘This average speed, used with the distance of -2.2 cm (-0.022 m), can be used to find the time of
deceleration
y/At,
1.014 s. Finally, we use this in Eq. 2-26 to find
Pav =
and putting numbers into the expression gives At
the acceleration,
(0) =(-3.1 m/s) + a(0.014 8),
which gives a= 220 m/s.
(b) The average net force on the man is
DY Fy= may = (83kg)(220m/s?) = 1.8% 104N.
E3-24 The average speed of the salmon while decelerating is 4.6 ft/s. ‘The time required to stop
the salmon is then ¢ = 2/vgy = (0.38 ft)/(4.6 ft/s) = 8.3x10-%s, The deceleration of the salmon
is a = Av/At = (9.2 ft/s)/(8.2-2s) = 110 ft/s*. The force on the salmon is then F = Wa/g =
(19 Ib) (110 ft/s”) /(32 ft/s*) = 65 Ib.
3-25] From appendix G we find 1 Ib = 4.448 N; so the weight is (100 Ib)(4.448 N/1 Ib) = 445
; similarly the cord will break if it pulls upward on the object with a force greater than 387 N.
‘The mass of the object is m = W/g = (445 N)/(9.8 m/s?) = 45 kg.
‘There are two vertical forces on the 45 kg object, an upward force from the cord Foc (which has a
maximum value of 387 N) and a downward force from gravity Fog. Thea > F, = Foo—Foa = (387
N) ~ (445 N) = —58 N. Since the net force is negative, the object must be accelerating downward
according to
ay = > F,/m = (-58N)/(45kg) = -1.3m/2?.
ES-26 (a) Constant speed means no acceleration, hence no net force; this means the weight is
balanced by the force from the scale, so the scale reads 65 N.
(b) Net force on mass is Fret = ma = Wa/g = (65N)(—2.4m/s*)/(9.81 m/s?)
the weight is 65 N, the scale must be exerting a force of (-16N) — {-65N) = 49N.
-16N.. Since
E3-27 The magnitude of the net force is W — R = (1600 kg)(9.81m/s*) — (3700N) = 12000N.
The acceleration is then @ = F/m = (12000NN)/(1600 kg) = 7.5m/s*. The time to fal is
V2%y/a = /2—T2m)/(-75m/s) = 4.45.
‘The final speed is v = at = (—7.5m/s*)(4.48) = 33m/s. Get better brakes, eh?
3-28 The average speed during the acceleration is 140 ft/s. The time for the plane to travel 300
fris
t= 2/ = (300 ft) /(140 ft/s) = 2.148.
‘The acceleration is then
a= Av/At = (280 ft/s)/(2.148) = 130 ft/s".
The net force on the plane is F = ma = Wa/g = (52000 Ib)(130 ft/s") (32 ft/s) = 2.1 10°lb.
‘The force exerted by the catapult is then 2.1x 10°Ib — 2.4x 10* Ib = 1.86 10° Ib.
363-29 (a) The acceleration of a hovering rocket is 0, so the net foree is zero; hence the thrust must
equal the weight. Then T = W = mg = (51000kg)(9.81.m/s*) = 5.0>10°N,
(b) If the rocket accelerates upward then the net force is F = ma = (51000kg)(18m/s?)
9.2x10°N. Now Fast = T — W, 80 T = 9.2% 10° N + 5.0 108N = 1.42x 108N,
3-30 (a) Net force on parachute + person system is Fyer = ma = (77kg + 5.2kg)(—2.5s?)
-210N. The weight of the system is W = mg = (77kg-+5.2kg)(9.81s?) = 810N. If P is the upward
force of the air on the system (parachute) then P = Fe: + W = (—210N) + (B10N) = 600N.
(b) The net force on the parachute is Faet = ma = (5.2kg)(~2.5s) = -13N. The weight of the
parachute is W = mg = (5.2kg)(9.81 m/s) = 51N. If D is the downward force of the person on the
parachute then D = —Fae — W + P = ~(—13N) — (51N) + 600N = 560N.
'E3-31] (a) The total mass of the helicopter+-car system is 19,500 kg; and the only other force
acting on the system is the force of gravity, which is
W =mg = (19,500kg)(9.8m/s?) = 1.91x10°N.
The force of gravity is directed down, so the net force on the system is Sy Fy = Fa — (1.91x10°
N). The net force can also be found from Newton’s second law: > Fy = may = (19,500 kg)(1.4
m/s?) = 2.7 10 N. Equate the two expressions for the net force, Fiya — (1.91%10° N) = 2.7% 10
N, and solve; Fig = 2.2%10° N.
(b) Repeat the above steps except: (1) the system will consist only of the car, and (2) the upward
force on the car comes from the supporting cable only Foc. The weight of the car is W = mg = (4500
kg)(9.8 m/s?) = 4.4x 10* N. The net force is > Fy = Foo — (4.4x10* N), it can also be written as
SR, = may = (4500 kg)(1.4 m/s®) = 6300 N. Equating, Foc = 50,000 N.
P3-1 (a) The acceleration is a = F/m = (2.7 10~SN)/(280 kg) = 9.64% 10~*m/s?. The displace-
‘ment (from the original trajectory) is
at? /2 = (9.64x 10-*m/s*)(2.48)?/2
(b) The acceleration is a = F/m = (2.7% 10-N)/(2.1 kg) = 1.3%10-'m/s*. The displacement
(rom the original trajectory) is
y= al?/2 = (1.3x10%m/s?)(2.48)?/2 = 3.710%.
8x10~"m.
3-2. (a) The acceleration of the sled is a = F/m = (5.2N)/(8.4kg) = 0.62m/s?.
(b) The acceleration of the git] is a = F/m = (5.2N)/(40kg) = 0.13m/s?.
() The distance traveled by girl is 21 = a;t2/2; the distance traveled by the sled is 22 = azt?/2.
‘The two meet when 2; +22 = 15m. This happens when (a; + a2)t? = 30m. They then meet when
t= (80m) /(0.13 m/s* + 0.62m/s*) = 6.38. The girl moves 21 = (0.13m/s?)(6.38)?/2 = 2.6m.
P3-3] (2) Start with block one. It starts from rest, accelerating through a distance of 16 m in a
time of 4.2 s. Applying Eq. 2-28,
16m = (0)+(0)(42 8) + Jos(s2 3,
find the acceleration to be ap = —1.8 m/s?.
37‘Now for the second block. The acceleration of the second block is identical to the first for much
tthe same reason that all objects fall with approximately the same acceleration.
(b) The initial and final velocities are related by a sign, then vp = —vos and Eq. 2-26 becomes
Ye = vor tazt,
—Yr = vor tact,
22 = (-1.8 m/s?)(4.2 8).
which gives an initial velocity of uoe = 8.8 m/s.
(©) Half of the time is spent coming down from the highest point, so the time to “fall” is 2.1 s.
‘The distance traveled is found from Eq. 2-28,
== (0)+(O)(2t8) + 5(-1.8m/s?)(2.15)? = 40m.
P3-4 (a) The weight of the engine is W = mg = (1400kg)(9.81 m/s?) = 1.37% 10*N. If each bolt
supports 1/3 of this, then the force on a bolt is 4600N.
(b) If engine accelerates up at 2.60m/s®, then net force on the engine is
Foot = ma = (1400 kg) (2.60:m/s?) = 3.64%10°N,
‘The upward force from the bolts must then be
B= Free + W = (3.64x 10° N) + (187x104 N) = 1.73x104N.
The force per bolt is one third this, or 5800 N.
P3-5 (a) If craft descends with constant speed then net force is zero, so thrust balances weight.
‘The weight is then 3260 N.
(b) IF the thrust is 2200 N the net force is 2200N ~ 3260N = —1060N. ‘The mass is then
tm = F/a = (~1060N)/(—0.390m/s?) = 2720 kg.
(€) The acceleration due to gravity is g = W/m = (3260N)/(2720kg) = 1.20m/s?.
P3-6 The weight is originally Mg. The net force is originally Ma. The upward force is then
originally B= Mg— Ma. The goal is for a net force of (M —m)a and a weight (M —m)g. Then
(M —m)a = B - (M —m)g = Mg — Ma- Mg +mg = mg - Ma,
or m = 2Ma/(a+9).
P3-7] (a) Consider all three carts as one system. Then
xr Mreei@as
65N = (BLkg+24kg+1.2kg)ay,
0.97 m/s”
(b) Now choose your system so that it only contains the third car. Then
DF = Fas = mga, = (1.2kg)(0.97 m/s*).
‘The unknown can be solved to give Fz3 = 1.2N directed to the right.
(c) Consider a system involving the second and third carts. Then > F; = F\2, so Newton’s law
applied to the system gives
ay.
Fin = (ma + ms)az = (2.4kg + 1.2kg)(0.97 m/s?) = 3.5N.PS-8 (a) F=ma = (45.2kg + 22.8kg + 34.3kg)(1.32m/s?) = 135N.
(b) Consider only ms. Then F = ma = (34.3kg)(1.321n/s*) = 45.3N.
(c) Consider mz and ms. Then F = ma = (22.8kg + 34.3 kg)(1.32m/s?) = 75.4N.
P3-9 (c) The net force on each link is the same, Fact = ma = (0.100 kg)(2.50m/s?) = 0.250N.
(a) The weight of each link is W = mg = (0.100kg)(9.81 m/s*) = 0.981 N. On each link (except
the top or bottom link) there is a weight, an upward force from the link above, and a downward force
from the link below. Then Fye, = U-D—W. Then U = Fye.+W+D = (0.250N)+(0.981N)+D =
1.281N + D. For the bottom link D = 0. For the bottom link, U = 1.23N. For the link above,
U = 1.23N+1.23N = 2.46N. For the link above, U = 1.23N+2.46N = 3.69N. For the link above,
U =1.23N+3.69N = 4.92N.
(b) For the top link, the upward force is U = 1.23N + 4.92N =
ISN.
P3-10 (a) The acceleration of the two blocks is a = F/(m; +ma) The net force on block 2 is from
the force of contact, and is
P= mga = Fing/(my +a) = (8.2N)(12kg)/(23kg + 1.2kg) = 1.1N.
(b) The acceleration of the two blocks is a = F/(m: +a) The net force on block 1 is from the
force of contact, and is
P= mya = Fmi/(m; + ma) = (8.2N)(2.3kg)/(23kg + 1.2kg) = 21N.
Not a third law pair, eh?
PS-11] (2) Treat the system as including both the block and the rope, s0 that the mass of
the system is M +m. There is one (relevant) force which acts on the system, so > Fs = P. Then
Newton's second law would be written as P = (M-+m)az, Solve this for az and get az = P/(M-+m).
(b) Now consider only the block. The horizontal force doesn’t act on the block; instead, there is
the force of the rope on the block. We'll assume that force has a magnitude R, and this is the only
(relevant) force on the block, so > Fz = R for the net force on the block.. In this case Newton's
second law would be written R= Maz. Yes, az is the same in part (a) and (b); the acceleration of
the block is the same as the acceleration of the block + rope. Substituting in the results from part
(a) we find
M
MimE4-1 (a) The time to pass between the plates ist = 2/,
(b) The vertical displacement of the beam is then y
10-®s)?/2 = 0.27 cm.
(c) The velocity components are vz = 9.6% 10" cm/s and vy
10~%s) = 2.3% 108em/s.
(2.3 can)/(9.6x10* cm/s) = 2.4x10-%
(9.4 x 102° em/s*)(2.4 x
(0.410 em/s?)(2.4%
E4-2 d= AV/At = ~(6.30i ~ 8.42))(m/s)/(3s) = (-2.10i + 2.81))(m/s?).
B43] (a) The velocity is given by
& = a+ e i) +g (Om),
¥ = (0)+2B+Ck.
(b) The acceleration is given by
® = 4 (ni)+4 (a
& = (0) +2Bj+(0).
(c) Nothing exciting happens in the z direction, so we will focus on the yz plane. The trajectory
in this plane is a parabola.
E44 (a) Maximum z is when vg = 0. Since vz = ast + vz0, Up = 0 when t = -veo/ae =
=(8.6m/s)/(—1.2 m/s
(b) Since v, = 0 we have |@] =
~(1.4m/s)(8.05) + (0) = ~4.2m/s
F = [-(0.6m/s*)i - (0.7m/s*)j](3.08)? + ((3.6m/s)i](3.0s) = (5.4m)i - (6.3m)j.
E4-5 F =F, +¥; = (3.7N)j+(43N)i. Then /m = (0.71 m/s*)j + (0.83 m/s?)i.
E4-6 (a) The acceleration is a = F/m = (2.2m/s*)j. The velocity after 15 seconds is
or
atv,
‘¥ = ((2.2m/s*)j](15s) + [(42 m/s)i] = (42m/s)i + (33 m/s)j.
(b) # = at?/2+ Wot, 50
# = [(1.1m/s?)}](15s)? + {(42m/s)i](15s) = (630 m)i + (250m)j.
E47] The block has » weight W’ = mg = (5.1 kg)(9.8 m/s?) = 50 N.
(@) Initially P = 12 N, so P, = (12N)sin(25°) = 5.1 N and P, = (12NN)cos(25°) = 11 N. Since
the upward component is less than the weight, the block doesn’t leave the floor, and a normal force
will be present which will make > Fy = 0. There is only one contribution to the horizontal force,
80 D Fz = Pe. Newton's second law then gives az = P,/m = (11 N)/(5.1 kg) = 2.2 m/s?.
(b) As P is increased, so is Py; eventually P, will be large enough to overcome the weight of the
block. This happens just after P, = W = 50 N, which occurs when P = P,/sin8 = 120 N.
(c) Repeat part (a), except now P = 120 N. Then P, = 110 N, and the acceleration of the block
is az = P,/m = 22 m/s?,