(I) What force is needed to accelerate a child on a sled (total mass = 60.0 kg) at 25 m/s2?
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Textbook Solutions for Physics: Principles with Applications
Question
Problem 2P
A net force of 265 N accelerates a bike and rider at 2.30 m/s2. What is the mass of the bike and rider together?
Solution
Solution 2P
Step 1 of 2:
In this question, we need to to find mass of the bike and rider together
Data given
Force of the bike and rider
Acceleration of the bike
full solution
Solved: A net force of 265 N accelerates a bike and rider
Chapter 4 textbook questions
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Chapter 4: Problem 1 Physics: Principles with Applications 6 -
Chapter 4: Problem 2 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(I) A net force of 265 N accelerates a bike and rider at 2.30 m/s2. What is the mass of the bike and rider together?
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Chapter 4: Problem 3 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(I) How much tension must a rope withstand if it is used to accelerate a %0-kg car horizontally along a frictionless surface at 20 m/s2?
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Chapter 4: Problem 4 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(I) What is the weight of a 76-kg astronaut (rt) on Earth. (b) on the Moon (g = 7 m/s2), (c) on Mars (g = 3.7 m/s2). (d) in outer space traveling with constant velocity?
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Chapter 4: Problem 5 Physics: Principles with Applications 6II) A 20.0-kg box rests on a table. (a) What is the weight of the box and the normal force acting on it? (b) A 10.0- kg box is placed on top of the 20.0-kg box. as shown in Fig. 4- Determine the normal force that the table exerts on the 20.0-kg box and the normal force that the 20.0- kg box exerts on the 10.0-kg box.
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Chapter 4: Problem 6 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) What average force is required to stop an 1100-kg car in 8.0 s if the car is traveling at 95 km/h?
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Chapter 4: Problem 7 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) What average force is needed to accelerate a 7.0- gram pellet from rest to 125 m/s over a distance of 0.800 m along the barrel of a rifle?
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Chapter 4: Problem 8 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A fisherman yanks a fish vertically out of the water with an acceleration of 2.5 m/s2 using very light fishing line that has a breaking strength of 22 N. The fisherman unfortunately loses the fish as the line snaps. What can you say about the mass of the fish?
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Chapter 4: Problem 9 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A 0.140-kg baseball traveling 35.0 m/s strikes the catcher's mitt, which, in bringing the ball to rest, recoils backward 10 cm. What was the average force applied by the ball on the glove?
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Chapter 4: Problem 10 Physics: Principles with Applications 6How much tension must a rope withstand if it is used to accelerate a 1200-kg car vertically upward at 0.80 m/s2?
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Chapter 4: Problem 11 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A particular race car can cover a quarter-mile track (402 m) in 6.40 s starting from a standstill. Assuming the acceleration is constant, how many g's" does the driver experience? If the combined mass of the driver and race car is 485 kg, what horizontal force must the road exert on the tires?
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Chapter 4: Problem 12 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A 12.0-kg bucket is lowered vertically by a rope in which there is 163 N of tension at a given instant. What is the acceleration of the bucket? Is it up or down?
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Chapter 4: Problem 13 Physics: Principles with Applications 6An elevator (mass 4850 kg) is to be designed so that the maximum acceleration is 0.0680g. What are the maximum and minimum forces the motor should exert on the supporting cable?
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Chapter 4: Problem 14 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A 75-kg petty thief wants to escape from a third-story jail window. Unfortunately, a makeshift rope made of sheets tied together can support a mass of only 58 kg. How might the thief use this rope to escape? Give a quantitative answer.
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Chapter 4: Problem 15 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A person stands on a bathroom scale in a motionless elevator. When the elevator begins to move, the scale briefly reads only 0.75 of the persons regular weight. Calculate the acceleration of the elevator, and find the direction of acceleration.
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Chapter 4: Problem 16 Physics: Principles with Applications 6The cable supporting a 2125-kg elevator has a maximum strength of 2750 N. What maximum upward acceleration can it give the elevator without breaking?
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Chapter 4: Problem 17 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(a) What is the acceleration of two falling sky divers (mass 132 kg including parachute) when the upward force of air resistance is equal to one-fourth of their weight? (b) After popping open the parachute, the divers descend leisurely to the ground at constant speed. What now is the force of air resistance on the sky divers and their parachute? See Fig. 4-39.
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Chapter 4: Problem 18 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A person jumps from the roof of a house 3.9-m high. When he strikes the ground below, he bends his knees so that his torso decelerates over an approximate distance of 0.70 m. If the mass of his torso (excluding legs) is 42 kg, find (a) his velocity just before his feet strike the ground, and (/>) the average force exerted on his torso by his legs during deceleration.
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Chapter 4: Problem 19 Physics: Principles with Applications 6) A box weighing 77.0 N rests on a table. A rope tied to the box runs vertically upward over a pulley and a weight is hung from the other end (Fig. 4-40). Determine the force that the table exerts on the box if the weight hanging on the other side of the pulley weighs (a) 30.0 N. (b) 60.0 N, and (c) 90.0 N.
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Chapter 4: Problem 20 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Draw the free-body diagram for a basketball player (a) just before leaving the ground on a jump, and (b) while in the air. See Fig. 4-4
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Chapter 4: Problem 21 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Sketch the free-body diagram of a baseball (a) at the moment it is hit by the bat. and again (b) after it has left the bat and is flying toward the outfield.
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Chapter 4: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A 650-N force acts in a northwesterly direction. A second 650-N force must be exerted in what direction so that the resultant of the two forces points westward? Illustrate your answer with a vector diagram.
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Chapter 4: Problem 23 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Arlene is to walk across a high wire* strung horizontally between two buildings 10.0 m apart. The sag in the rope when she is at the midpoint is 10.0, as shown in Fig. 4-42. If her mass is 50.0 kg, what is the tension in the rope at this point?
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Chapter 4: Problem 24 Physics: Principles with Applications 6The two forces F, and F2 shown in Fig. 4-43a and b (looking down) act on a 27.0-kg object on a frictionless tabletop. If F| = 10.2 N and F2 = 16.0 N. find the net force on the object and its acceleration for () and (6).
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Chapter 4: Problem 25 Physics: Principles with Applications 6One 3.2-kg paint bucket is hanging by a massless cord from another 3.2-kg paint bucket, also hanging by a massless cord, as shown in Fig. 4-44. (d) If the buckets are at rest, what is the tension in each cord? (b) If the two buckets are pulled upward with an acceleration of 60 m/s2 by the upper cord, calculate the tension in each cord.
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Chapter 4: Problem 26 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A person pushes a 14.0-kg lawn mower at constant speed with a force of F = 88.0 N directed along the handle, which is at an angle of 45.0 to the horizontal (Fig. 4-45). (a) Draw the free-body diagram showing all forces acting on the mower. Calculate (b) the horizontal friction force on the mower, then (c) the normal force exerted vertically upward on the mower by the ground, (d) What force must the person exert on the lawn mower to accelerate it from rest to 5 m/s in 2.5 seconds, assuming the same friction force?
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Chapter 4: Problem 27 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Two snowcats tow a housing unit to a new location at McMurdo Base. Antarctica, as shown in Fig. 4- 46. The sum of the forces FA and FB exerted on the unit by the horizontal cables is parallel to the line L. and FA = 4500 N. Determine FB and the magnitude of FA + FB.
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Chapter 4: Problem 28 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A train locomotive is pulling two cars of the same mass behind it. Fig. 4-47. Determine the ratio of the tension in the coupling between the locomotive and the first car (Fn), to that between the first car and the second car (FT2), for any nonzero acceleration of the train.
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Chapter 4: Problem 29 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A window washer pulls herself upward using the bucket- pulley apparatus shown in Fig. 4-48. (a) How hard must she pull downward to raise herself slowly at constant speed? (b) If she increases this force by 15%. what will her acceleration be? The mass of the person plus the bucket is 65 kg.
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Chapter 4: Problem 30 Physics: Principles with Applications 6At the instant a race began, a 65-kg sprinter exerted a force of 720 N on the starting block at a 22 angle with respect to the ground, (a) What was the horizontal acceleration of the sprinter? (b) If the force was exerted for 0.32 s. with what speed did the sprinter leave the starting block?
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Chapter 4: Problem 31 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Figure 4-49 shows a block (mass wA) on a smooth horizontal surface, connected by a thin cord that passes over a pulley to a second block (wB). which hangs vertically. (a) Draw a free-body diagram for each block, showing the force of gravity on each, the force (tension) exerted by the cord, and any normal force. (b) Apply Newton's second law to find formulas for the acceleration of the system and for the tension in the cord. Ignore friction and the masses of the pulley and cord.
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Chapter 4: Problem 32 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A pair of fuzzy dice is hanging by a string from your rearview mirror. While you are accelerating from a stoplight to 28 m/s in 6.0 s. what angle ft does the string make with the vertical? See Fig. 4-50.
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Chapter 4: Problem 33 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Three blocks on a frictionlcss horizontal surface are in contact with each other, as shown in Fig. 4-5 A force F is applied to block A (mass mA). (A) Draw a free-bodv diagram for each block. Determine (b) the acceleration of the system (in terms of wA. wiB. and mc), (c) the net force on each block, and (d) the force of contact that each block exerts on its neighbor, (c) If wA = = niQ = 12.0 kg and F = 96.0 N. give numerical answers to (/?). (c), and (r/). Do your answers make sense intuitively?
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Chapter 4: Problem 34 Physics: Principles with Applications 6The two masses shown in Fig. 4-52 are each initially l.80m above the ground, and the massless frictionless pulley is 4.8 m above the ground. What maximum height does the lighter object reach after the system is released? [Hint: First determine the acceleration of the lighter mass and then its velocity at the moment the heavier one hits the ground. This is its "launch speed. Assume it doesnt hit the pulley.]
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Chapter 4: Problem 35 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Suppose two boxes on a frictionless table are connected by a heavy cord of mass 0 kg. Calculate the acceleration of each box and the tension at each end of the cord, using the free-body diagrams shown in Fig. 4-53. Assume Fv = 40.0 N. and ignore sagging of the cord. Compare your results to F.xample 4-12 and Fig. 4-22.
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Chapter 4: Problem 36 Physics: Principles with Applications 6If the coefficient of kinetic friction between a 35-kg crate and the floor is 0.30. what horizontal force is required to move the crate at a steady speed across the floor? What horizontal force is required if is zero?
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Chapter 4: Problem 37 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A force of 48.0 N is required to start a 5.0-kg box moving across a horizontal concrete floor, (a) What is the coefficient of static friction between the box and the floor? (b) If the 48.0-N force continues, the box accelerates at 0.70 m/s2. What is the coefficient of kinetic friction?
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Chapter 4: Problem 38 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Suppose that you are standing on a train accelerating at 0.20g. What minimum coefficient of static friction must exist between your feet and the floor if you are not to slide?
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Chapter 4: Problem 39 Physics: Principles with Applications 6What is the maximum acceleration a car can undergo if the coefficient of static friction between the tires and the ground is 0.80?
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Chapter 4: Problem 40 Physics: Principles with Applications 6The coefficient of static friction between hard rubber and normal street pavement is about 0.8. On how steep a hill (maximum angle) can you leave a car parked?
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Chapter 4: Problem 41 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A 0-kg box is released on a 32 incline and accelerates down the incline at 0.30 m/s2. Find the friction force impeding its motion. What is the coefficient of kinetic friction?
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Chapter 4: Problem 42 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A car can decelerate at -4.80 m/s2 without skidding when coming to rest on a level road. What would its deceleration be if the road were inclined at 13 uphill? Assume the same static friction coefficient.
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Chapter 4: Problem 43 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A box sits at rest on a rough 30 inclined plane. Draw the free-body diagram, showing all the forces acting on the box. (b) How would the diagram change if the box were sliding down the plane? (c) How would it change if the box were sliding up the plane after an initial shove?
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Chapter 4: Problem 44 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Drag-race tires in contact with an asphalt surface have a very high coefficient of static friction. Assuming a constant acceleration and no slipping of tires, estimate the coefficient of static friction needed for a drag racer to cover 0 km in 12 s. starting from rest.
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Chapter 4: Problem 45 Physics: Principles with Applications 6The coefficient of kinetic friction for a 22-kg bobsled on a track is 0.10. What force is required to push it down a 6.0 incline and achieve a speed of 60 km/h at the end of 75 m?
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Chapter 4: Problem 46 Physics: Principles with Applications 6For the system of Fig. 4-32 (Example 4-20) how- large a mass would box A have to have to prevent any motion from occurring? Assume = 0.30.
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Chapter 4: Problem 47 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A box is given a push so that it slides across the floor. How far will it go, given that the coefficient of kinetic friction is 0.20 and the push imparts an initial speed of 4.0 m/s?
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Chapter 4: Problem 48 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Two crates, of mass 75 kg and 110 kg. arc in contact and at rest on a horizontal surface (Fig. 4-54). A 620-N force is exerted on the 75-kg crate. If the coefficient of kinetic friction is 0. calculate (a) the acceleration of the system, and (/?) the force that each crate exerts on the other, (c) Repeat with the crates reversed.
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Chapter 4: Problem 49 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A flatbed truck is carrying a heavy' crate. The coefficient of static friction between the crate and the bed of the truck is 0.75. What is the maximum rate at which the driver can decelerate and still avoid having the crate slide against the cab of the truck?
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Chapter 4: Problem 50 Physics: Principles with Applications 6On an icy day, you worry about parking your car in your driveway, which has an incline of 12. Your neighbor's driveway has an incline of 9.0. and the driveway across the street is at 6.0. The coefficient of static friction between tire rubber and ice is 0. Which driveway(s) will be safe to park in?
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Chapter 4: Problem 51 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A child slides down a slide with a 28 incline, and at the bottom her speed is precisely half what it would have been if the slide had been frictionless. Calculate the coefficient of kinetic friction between the slide and the child.
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Chapter 4: Problem 52 Physics: Principles with Applications 6The carton shown in Fig. 4-55 lies on a plane tilted at an angle 6 = 22.0 to the horizontal, with = 0.12. (<?) Determine the acceleration of the carton as it slides down the plane. (b) If the carton starts from rest 9.30 m up the plane from its base, what will be the cartons speed when it reaches the bottom of the incline?
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Chapter 4: Problem 53 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A carton is given an initial speed of 3.0 m/s up the 22.0 plane shown in Fig. 4-55. (a) How far up the plane will it go? (b) How much time elapses before it returns to its starting point? Ignore friction.
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Chapter 4: Problem 54 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A roller coaster reaches the top of the steepest hill with a speed of 6.0 km/h. It then descends the hill, which is at an average angle of 45 and is 45.0 m long. Estimate its speed when it reaches the bottom. Assume /iik = 0.18.
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Chapter 4: Problem 55 Physics: Principles with Applications 6An 18.0-kg box is released on a 37.0 incline and accelerates dowrn the incline at 0.270 m/s2. Find the friction force impeding its motion. How large is the coefficient of kinetic friction?
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Chapter 4: Problem 56 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A small box is held in place against a rough wall by someone pushing on it with a force directed upward at 28 above the horizontal. Ibe coefficients of static and kinetic friction between the box and wall are 0.40 and 0.30. respectively. The box slides down unless the applied force has magnitude 13 N. What is the mass of the box?
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Chapter 4: Problem 57 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Piles of snow on slippery' roofs can become dangerous projectiles as they melt. Consider a chunk of snow at the ridge of a roof with a pitch of 30. (a) What is the minimum value of the coefficient of static friction that will keep the snowr from sliding down? (b) As the snow begins to melt, the coefficient of static friction decreases and the snow eventually slips. Assuming that the distance from the chunk to the edge of the roof is 5.0 m and the coefficient of kinetic friction is 0.20, calculate the speed of the snow chunk wrhen it slides off the roof, (c) If the edge of the roof is 10.0 m above ground, what is the speed of the snow when it hits the ground?
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Chapter 4: Problem 58 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Show that the minimum stopping distance for an automobile traveling at speed v is equal to v2/2/xs#, w'here /xs is the coefficient of static friction between the tires and the road, and g is the acceleration of gravity. (b) What is this distance for a 1200-kg car traveling 95 km/h if /xs = 0.75?
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Chapter 4: Problem 59 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A coffee cup on the dashboard of a car slides forward on the dash when the driver decelerates from 45 km/h to rest in 3.5 s or less, but not if he decelerates in a longer time. What is the coefficient of static friction between the cup and the dash ?
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Chapter 4: Problem 60 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A small block of mass m is given an initial speed v0 up a ramp inclined at angle 0 to the horizontal. It travels a distance d up the ramp and comes to rest. Determine a formula for the coefficient of kinetic friction between block and ramp.
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Chapter 4: Problem 61 Physics: Principles with Applications 6The 75-kg climber in Fig. 4-56 is supported in the chimney" by the friction forces exerted on his shoes and back. The static coefficients of friction between his shoes and the wall, and between his back and the wall, are 0.80 and 0.60. respectively. What is the minimum normal force he must exert? Assume the walls are vertical and that friction forces are both at a maximum. Ignore his grip on the rope.
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Chapter 4: Problem 62 Physics: Principles with Applications 6) Boxes are moved on a conveyor belt from where they are filled to the packing station 10m away. The belt is initially stationary' and must finish with zero speed. The most rapid transit is accomplished if the belt accelerates for half the distance, then decelerates for the final half of the trip. If the coefficient of static friction between a box and the belt is 0.60, what is the minimum transit time for each box?
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Chapter 4: Problem 63 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A block (mass mi) lying on a frictionless inclined plane is connected to a mass m2 by a massless cord passing over a pulley, as shown in Fig. 4-57. (a) Determine a formula for the acceleration of the system of the two blocks in terms of m(. m2.0 and g. (b) What conditions apply to masses nt\ and m2 for the acceleration to be in one direction (say. W| down the plane), or in the opposite direction?
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Chapter 4: Problem 64 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Suppose the coefficient of kinetic friction between mi and the plane in Fig. 4-57 is = 0. and that nt\ = m2 = 2.7 kg. As m2 moves down, determine the magnitude of the acceleration of m\ and w2. given 0 = 25. (b) What smallest value of will keep this system from accelerating?
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Chapter 4: Problem 65 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A bicyclist of mass 65kg (including the bicycle) can coast down a 6.0<: hill at a steady speed of 6.0 km/h because of air resistance. How much force must be applied to climb the hill at the same speed and same air resistance?
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Chapter 4: Problem 66 Physics: Principles with Applications 6According to a simplified model of a mammalian heart, at each pulse approximately 20 g of blood is accelerated from 0.25 m/s to 0.35 m/s during a period of 0.10 s. What is the magnitude of the force exerted by the heart muscle?
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Chapter 4: Problem 67 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A person has a reasonable chance of surviving an automobile crash if the deceleration is no more than 30 g's." Calculate the force on a 70-kg person undergoing this acceleration. What distance is traveled if the person is brought to rest at this rate from 100 km/h?
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Chapter 4: Problem 68 Physics: Principles with Applications 6If the horizontal acceleration produced by an earthquake is a. and if an object is going to hold its place on the ground, show that the coefficient of static friction with the ground must be at least /xs = a/g. (b) The famous Loma Prieta earthquake that stopped the 1989 World Series produced ground accelerations of up to 4.0 m/s2 in the San Francisco Bay Area. Would a chair have started to slide on a linoleum floor with coefficient of static friction 0.25?
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Chapter 4: Problem 69 Physics: Principles with Applications 6An 1150-kg car pulls a 450-kg trailer. The car exerts a horizontal force of 3.8 X 103N against the ground in order to accelerate. What force does the car exert on the trailer? Assume an effective friction coefficient of 0.15 for the trailer.
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Chapter 4: Problem 70 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Police investigators, examining the scene of an accident involving two cars, measure 72-m-long skid marks of one of the cars, which nearly came to a stop before colliding. The coefficient of kinetic friction between rubber and the pavement is about 0.80. F.stimatc the initial speed of that car assuming a level road.
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Chapter 4: Problem 71 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A car starts rolling down a l-in-4 hill (1 -in-4 means that for each 4 m traveled along the road, the elevation change is 1 m). How fast is it going when it reaches the bottom after traveling 55 m? (a) Ignore friction. (6) Assume an effective coefficient of friction equal to 0.10.
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Chapter 4: Problem 72 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A 2.0-kg purse is dropped from the top of the Leaning Tower of Pisa and falls 55 m before reaching the ground with a speed of 29 m/s. What was the average force of air resistance?
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Chapter 4: Problem 73 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A cyclist is coasting at a steady speed of 12 m/s but enters a muddy stretch where the effective coefficient of friction is 0.60. Will the cyclist emerge from the muddy stretch without having to pedal if the mud lasts for 11 m? If so, what will be the speed upon emerging?
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Chapter 4: Problem 74 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A city planner is working on the redesign of a hilly- portion of a city. An important consideration is how steep the roads can be so that even low-powered cars can get up the hills without slowing down. A particular small car, with a mass of 1100 kg. can accelerate on a level road from rest to 21 m/s (75 km/h) in 14.0 s. Using these data, calculate the maximum steepness of a hill.
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Chapter 4: Problem 75 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Francesca, who likes physics experiments, dangles her watch from a thin piece of string while the jetliner she is in takes off from JFK Airport (Fig. 4-58). She notices that the string makes an angle of 25 with respect to the vertical as the aircraft accelerates for takeoff, which takes about 18 s. Estimate the takeoff speed of the aircraft.
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Chapter 4: Problem 76 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A 0-kg block is connected to an empty 35-kg bucket by a cord running over a frictionless pulley (Fig. 4-59). The coefficient of static friction between the table and the block is 0.450 and the coefficient of kinetic friction between the table and the block is 0.320. Sand is gradually added to the bucket until the system just begins to move, (a) Calculate the mass of sand added to the bucket. (/>) Calculate the acceleration of the system.
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Chapter 4: Problem 77 Physics: Principles with Applications 6In the design of a supermarket, there arc to be several ramps connecting different parts of the store. Customers will have to push grocery carts up the ramps and it is obviously desirable that this not be too difficult.The engineer has done a survey and found that almost no one complains if the force directed up the ramp is no more than 20 N. Ignoring friction, at what maximum angle 6 should the ramps be built, assuming a full 30-kg grocery cart?
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Chapter 4: Problem 78 Physics: Principles with Applications 6What minimum force F is needed to lift the piano (mass A/) using the pulley apparatus shown in Fig. 4-60? (b) Determine the tension in each section of rope: Fl {. Fn. F,3. and FjA.
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Chapter 4: Problem 79 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A jet aircraft is accelerating at 3.5 m/s2 at an angle of 45 above the horizontal. What is the total force that the cockpit seat exerts on the 75-kg pilot?
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Chapter 4: Problem 80 Physics: Principles with Applications 6In the design process for a child-restraint chair, an engineer considers the following set of conditions: A 12-kg child is riding in the chair, which is securely fastened to the seat of an automobile (Fig. 4-61). Assume the automobile is involved in a head-on collision with another vehicle. The initial speed of the car is 45 km/h. and this speed is reduced to zero during the collision time of 0.20 s. Assume a constant car deceleration during the collision and estimate the net horizontal force F that the straps of the restraint chair must exert on the child in order to keep her fixed to the chair. Treat the child as a particle and state any additional assumptions made during your analysis.
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Chapter 4: Problem 81 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A 7650-kg helicopter accelerates upward at 0.80 m/s2 while lifting a 1250-kg frame at a construction site. Fig. 4-62. (a) What is the lift force exerted by the air on the helicopter rotors? (b) What is the tension in the cable (ignore its mass) that connects the frame to the helicopter? (c) What force does the cable exert on the helicopter?
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Chapter 4: Problem 82 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A super high-speed 12-car Italian train has a mass of 660 metric tons (660.000 kg). It can exert a maximum force of 400 kN horizontally against the tracks, whereas at maximum velocity (300 km/h), it exerts a force of about 150 kN. Calculate (a) its maximum acceleration, and (b) estimate the force of air resistance at top speed.
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Chapter 4: Problem 83 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A 65-kg ice skater coasts with no effort for 75 m until she stops. If the coefficient of kinetic friction between her skates and the ice is /xk = 0.10. how fast was she moving at the start of her coast?
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Chapter 4: Problem 84 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Two rock climbers, Bill and Karen, use safety ropes of similar length. Karens rope is more elastic, called a dynamic rope by climbers. Bill has a static rope, not recommended for safety purposes in pro climbing. Karen falls freely about 2.0 m and then the rope stops her over a distance of 0 m (Fig. 4-63). (a) Estimate, assuming that the force is constant, how large a force she will feel from the rope. (Express the result in multiples of her weight.) (b) In a similar fall, Bill's rope stretches by 30 cm only. How many times his weight will the rope pull on him? Which climber is more likely to be hurt?
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Chapter 4: Problem 85 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A fisherman in a boat is using a 10-lb test" fishing line. This means that the line can exert a force of 45 N without breaking (1 lb = 4.45 N). (d) How heavy a fish can the fisherman land if he pulls the fish up vertically at constant speed? (b) If he accelerates the fish upward at 2.0 m/s2. what maximum weight fish can he land? (c) Is it possible to land a 15-lb trout on 10-lb test line? Why or why not?
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Chapter 4: Problem 86 Physics: Principles with Applications 6An elevator in a tall building is allowed to reach a maximum speed of 3.5 m/s going down. What must the tension be in the cable to stop this elevator over a distance of 2.6 m if the elevator has a mass of 1300 kg including occupants?
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Chapter 4: Problem 87 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Two boxes, my = 0 kg w ith a coefficient of kinetic friction of 0.10, and m2 = 2.0 kg with a coefficient of 0.20, are placed on a plane inclined at B = 30. (a) What acceleration does each box experience ? (/>) If a taut string is connected to the boxes (Fig. 4-64), with m2 initially farther dowm the slope, what is the acceleration of each box? (c) If the initial configuration is reversed with m{ starting lower with a taut siring, what is the acceleration of each box?
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Chapter 4: Problem 88 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A 75.0-kg person stands on a scale in an elevator. What does the scale read (in N and in kg) when the elevator is (a) at rest, (b) ascending at a constant speed of 3.0 m/s, (c) falling at 3.0m/s, (d) accelerating upward at 3.0 m/s2, (e) accelerating downward at 3.0 m/s2?
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Chapter 4: Problem 89 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Three mountain climbers wrho are roped together are ascending an icefield inclined at 20 to the horizontal. The last climber slips, pulling the second climber off his feet. The first climber is able to hold them both. If each climber has a mass of 75 kg, calculate the tension in each of the two sections of rope between the three climbers. Ignore friction between the ice and the fallen climbers.
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Chapter : Problem 1 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 1Q Why does a child in a wagon seem to fall backward when you give the wagon a sharp pull forward?
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Chapter : Problem 2 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 2P A net force of 265 N accelerates a bike and rider at 2.30 m/s2. What is the mass of the bike and rider together?
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Chapter : Problem 2 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 2Q A box rests on the (frictionless) bed of a truck. The truck driver starts the truck and accelerates forward. The box immediately starts to slide toward the rear of the truck bed. Discuss the motion of the box, in terms of Newton’s laws, as seen (a) by Mary standing on the ground beside the truck, and (b) by Chris who is riding on the truck (Fig. 4–35).
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Chapter : Problem 3 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 3P How much tension must a rope withstand if it is used to accelerate a 960-kg car horizontally along a frictionless surface at 1.20 m/s2?
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Chapter : Problem 3 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 3Q If the acceleration of an object is zero, are no forces acting on it? Explain.
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Chapter : Problem 34 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(III) The two masses shown in Fig. 4-52 are each initially 1.80 m above the ground, and the massless frictionless pulley is 4.8 m above the ground. What maximum height does the lighter object reach after the system is released? [Hint: First determine the acceleration of the lighter mass and then its velocity at the moment the heavier one hits the ground. This is its “launch” speed. Assume it doesn’t hit the pulley.] Figure 4-52
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Chapter : Problem 35 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(III) Suppose two boxes on a frictionless table are connected by a heavy cord of mass 1.0 kg. Calculate the acceleration of each box and the tension at each end of the cord, using the free-body diagrams shown in Fig 4–53. Assume FP = 40.0 N, and ignore sagging of the cord. Compare your results to Example 4–12 and Fig. 4–22.
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Chapter : Problem 36 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 36P If the coefficient of kinetic friction between a 35-kg crate and the floor is 0.30, what horizontal force is required to move the crate at a steady speed across the floor? What horizontal force is required if ?k is zero?
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Chapter : Problem 37 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 37P A force of 48.0N is required to start a 5.0-kg box moving across a horizontal concrete floor. (a) What is the coefficient of static friction between the box and the floor? (b) If the 48.0-N force continues, the box accelerates at 0.70 m/s2. What is the coefficient of kinetic friction?
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Chapter : Problem 38 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 38P (I) Suppose you are standing on a train accelerating at 0.20 g. What minimum coefficient of static friction must exist between your feet and the floor if you are not to slide?
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Chapter : Problem 87 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Two boxes, with a coefficient of kinetic friction of , and with a coefficient of , are placed on a plane inclined at (a) What acceleration does each box experience? If a taut string is connected to the boxes (Fig. ), with initially farther down the slope, what is the acceleration of each box? (c) If the initial configuration is reversed with starting lower with a taut string, what is the acceleration of each box?
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Chapter : Problem 88 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 88GP A 75.0-kg person stands on a scale in an elevator. What does the scale read (in N and in kg) when the elevator is (a) at rest, (b) ascending at a constant speed of 3.0 m/s, (c) falling at 3.0 m/s, (d) accelerating upward at 3.0 m/s2, (e) accelerating downward at 3.0 m/s2?
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Chapter : Problem 89 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 89GP Three mountain climbers who are roped together are ascending an icefield inclined at 21.0° to the horizontal. The last climber slips, pulling the second climber off his feet. The first climber is able to hold them both. If each climber has a mass of 75 kg, calculate the tension in each of the two sections of rope between the three climbers. Ignore friction between the ice and the fallen climbers.
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Chapter : Problem 4 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 4P What is the weight of a 76-kg astronaut (a) on Earth, (b) on the Moon (g = 1.7 m/s2), (c) on Mars (g = 3.7 m/s2), (d) in outer space traveling with constant velocity?
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Chapter : Problem 4 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 4Q Only one force acts on an object. Can the object have zero acceleration? Can it have zero velocity? Explain.
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Chapter : Problem 39 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 39P What is the maximum acceleration a car undergo if the coefficient of static friction between the tires and the ground is 0.80?
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Chapter : Problem 40 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 40P The coefficient of static friction between hard rubber and normal street pavement is about 0.8. On how steep a hill (maximum angle) can you leave a car parked?
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Chapter : Problem 1 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 1P What force is needed to accelerate a child on a sled (total mass = 60.0 kg) at 1.25 m/s2?
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Chapter : Problem 28 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) A train locomotive is pulling two cars of the same mass behind it, Fig. Determine the ratio of the tension in the coupling between the locomotive and the first car , to that between the first car and the second car , for any nonzero acceleration of the train.
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Chapter : Problem 29 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) A window washer pulls herself upward using the bucket-pulley apparatus shown in Fig. 4-48. (a) How hard must she pull downward to raise herself slowly at constant speed? (b) If she increases this force by 15%, what will her acceleration be? The mass of the person plus the bucket is 65 kg. Figure 4-48
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Chapter : Problem 30 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 30P (II) At the instant a race began, a 65-kg sprinter exerted a force of 720 N on the starting block at a 22° angle with respect to the ground. (a) What was the horizontal acceleration of the sprinter? (b) If the force was exerted for 0.32 s, with what speed did the sprinter leave the starting block?
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Chapter : Problem 31 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) Figure 4-49 shows a block (mass on a smooth horizontal surface, connected by a thin cord that passes over a pulley to a second block , which hangs vertically. (a) Draw a free-body diagram for each block, showing the force of gravity on each, the force (tension) exerted by the cord, and any normal force. (b) Apply Newton's second law to find formulas for the acceleration of the system and for the tension in the cord. Ignore friction and the masses of the pulley and cord.
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Chapter : Problem 32 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) A pair of fuzzy dice is hanging by a string from your rearview mirror. While you are accelerating from a stoplight to 28 m/s in 6.0 s, what angle \(\theta\) does the string make with the vertical? See Fig. 4-50. Figure 4-50 Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: theta
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Chapter : Problem 81 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A 7650-kg helicopter accelerates upward at 0.80 m/s2 while lifting a 1250-kg frame at a construction site, Fig. 4–62. (a) What is the lift force exerted by the air on the helicopter rotors? (b) What is the tension in the cable (ignore its mass) that connects the frame to the helicopter? (c) What force does the cable exert on the helicopter?
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Chapter : Problem 83 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A 65-kg ice skater coasts with no effort for 75 m until she stops. If the coefficient of kinetic friction between her skates and the ice is \(\mu_{\mathrm{k}}=0.10\), how fast was she moving at the start of her coast? Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: mu_k = 0.10
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Chapter : Problem 86 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 86GP An elevator in a tall building is allowed to reach a maximum speed of 3.5 m/s going down. What must the tension be in the cable to stop this elevator over a distance of 2.6 m if the elevator has a mass of 1300 kg including occupants?
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Chapter : Problem 33 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(III) Three blocks on a frictionless horizontal surface are in contact with each other, as shown in Fig. . A force is applied to block (mass . (a) Draw a free-body diagram for each block. Determine the acceleration of the system (in terms of , and the net force on each block, and the force of contact that each block exerts on its neighbor. If and , give numerical answers to , and . Do your answers make sense intuitively?
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Chapter : Problem 82 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 82GP A super high-speed 12-car Italian train has a mass of 660 metric tons (660,000 kg). It can exert a maximum force of 400 kN horizontally against the tracks, whereas at maximum velocity (300 km/h), it exerts a force of about 150 kN. Calculate (a) its maximum acceleration, and (b) estimate the force of air resistance at top speed.
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Chapter : Problem 84 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Two rock climbers, Jim and Karen, use safety ropes of similar length. Karen’s rope is more elastic, called a dynamic rope by climbers. Jim has a static rope, not recommended for safety purposes in pro climbing. (a) Karen falls freely about 2.0 m and then the rope stops her over a distance of 1.0 m (Fig. 4-63). Estimate, assuming that the force is constant, how large a force she will feel from the rope. (Express the result in multiples of her weight.) (b) In a similar fall, Jim’s rope stretches by 30 cm only. How many times his weight will the rope pull on him? Which climber is more likely to be hurt?
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Chapter : Problem 85 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 85GP A fisherman in a boat is using a “10-lb test” fishing line. This means that the line can exert a force of 45 N without Breaking (1 lb=4.45 N). (a) How heavy a fish can the fisherman land if he pulls the fish up vertically at constant speed? (b) If he accelerates the fish upward at 2.0 m/s2 what maximum weight fish can he land? (c) Is it possible to land a 15-lb trout on 10-lb test line? Why or why not?
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Chapter : Problem 5 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) A 20.0-kg box rests on a table. (a) What is the weight of the box and the normal force acting on it? (b) A 10.0-kg box is placed on top of the 20.0-kg box, as shown in Fig. 4–38. Determine the normal force that the table exerts on the 20.0-kg box and the normal force that the 20.0-kg box exerts on the 10.0-kg box. Figure 4-38 Problem 5.
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Chapter : Problem 5 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 5Q When a golf ball is dropped to the pavement, it bounces back up. (a) Is a force needed to make it bounce back up? (b) If so, what exerts the force?
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Chapter : Problem 6 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 6P What average force is required to stop an 1100-kg car in 8.0 s if the car is traveling at 95 km/h?
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Chapter : Problem 7 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 7P What average force is needed to accelerate a 7.00-gram pellet from rest to 125 m/s over a distance of 0.800 m along the barrel of a rifle?
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Chapter : Problem 6 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 6Q If you walk along a log floating on a lake, why does the log move in the opposite direction?
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Chapter : Problem 41 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 41P A 15.0-kg box is released on a 32° incline and accelerates down the incline at 0.30 m/s2. Find the friction force impeding its motion. What is the coefficient of kinetic friction?
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Chapter : Problem 42 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 42P A car can decelerate at –4.80 m/s2 without skidding when coming to rest on a level road. What would its deceleration be if the road were inclined at 13° uphill? Assume the same static friction coefficient.
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Chapter : Problem 43 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 43P (a) A box sits at rest on a rough 30° inclined plane. Draw the free-body diagram, showing all the forces acting on the box. (b) How would the diagram change if the box were sliding down the plane? (c) How would it change if the box were sliding up the plane after an initial shove?
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Chapter : Problem 44 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 44P (II) Drag-race tires in contact with an asphalt surface have a very high coefficient of static friction. Assuming a constant acceleration and no slipping of tires, estimate the coefficient of static friction needed for a drag racer to cover 1.0 km in 12 s, starting from rest.
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Chapter : Problem 45 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 45P The coefficient of kinetic friction for a 22-kg bobsled on a track is 0.10. What force is required to push it down a 6.0° incline and achieve a speed of 60 km/h at the end of 75 m?
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Chapter : Problem 7 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 7Q Why might your foot hurt if you kick a heavy desk or a wall?
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Chapter : Problem 8 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 8P A fisherman yanks a fish vertically out of the water with an acceleration of 2.5 m/s2 using very light fishing line that has a breaking strength of 22 N. The fisherman unfortunately loses the fish as the line snaps. What can you say about the mass of the fish?
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Chapter : Problem 8 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 8Q When you are running and want to stop quickly, you must decelerate quickly. (a) What is the origin of the force that causes you to stop? (b) Estimate (using your own experience) the maximum rate of deceleration of a person running at top speed to come to rest.
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Chapter : Problem 9 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 9P (II) A 0.140-kg baseball traveling 35.0 m/s strikes the catcher’s mitt, which, in bringing the ball to rest, recoils backward 11.0 cm. What was the average force applied by the ball on the glove?
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Chapter : Problem 9 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) A 0.140-kg baseball traveling 35.0 m/s strikes the catcher’s mitt, which, in bringing the ball to rest, recoils backward 11.0 cm. What was the average force applied by the ball on the glove?
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Chapter : Problem 46 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) For the system of Fig. 4–32 (Example 4–20), how large a mass would box A have to have to prevent any motion from occurring? Assume
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Chapter : Problem 47 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 47P A box is given a push so that it slides across the floor. How far will it go, given that the coefficient of kinetic friction is 0.20 and the push imparts an initial speed of 4.0 m/s?
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Chapter : Problem 48 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) Two crates, of mass 75 kg and 110 kg, are in contact and at rest on a horizontal surface (Fig. 4-54). A 620-N force is exerted on the 75-kg crate. If the coefficient of kinetic friction is 0.15, calculate (a) the acceleration of the system, and (b) the force that each crate exerts on the other. (c) Repeat with the crates reversed. Figure 4-54
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Chapter : Problem 49 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 49P A flatbed truck is carrying a heavy crate. The coefficient of static friction between the crate and the bed of the truck is 0.75. What is the maximum rate at which the driver can decelerate and still avoid having the crate slide against the cab of the truck?
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Chapter : Problem 50 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 50P On an icy day, you worry about parking your car in your driveway, which has an incline of 12°. Your neighbor’s driveway has an incline of 9.0°, and the driveway across the street is at 6.0°. The coefficient of static friction between tire rubber and ice is 0.15. Which driveway(s) will be safe to park in?
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Chapter : Problem 10 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 10P How much tension must a rope withstand if it is used to accelerate a 1200-kg car vertically upward at 0.80 m/s2?
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Chapter : Problem 10 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 10Q The force of gravity on a 2-kg rock is twice as great as that on a 1-kg rock. Why then doesn’t the heavier rock fall faster?
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Chapter : Problem 11 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 11P A particular race car can cover a quarter-mile track (402 m) in 6.40 s starting from a standstill. Assuming the acceleration is constant, how many “g’s” does the driver experience? If the combined mass of the driver and race car is 485 kg, what horizontal force must the road exert on the tires?
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Chapter : Problem 11 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 11Q Would a spring scale carried to the Moon give accurate results if the scale had been calibrated (a) in pounds, or (b) in kilograms?
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Chapter : Problem 51 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 51P A child slides down a slide with a 28° incline, and at the bottom her speed is precisely half what it would have been if the slide had been frictionless. Calculate the coefficient of kinetic friction between the slide and the child.
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Chapter : Problem 12 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 12P A 12.0-kg bucket is lowered vertically by a rope in which there is 163 N of tension at a given instant. What is the acceleration of the bucket? Is it up or down?
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Chapter : Problem 52 Physics: Principles with Applications 6The carton shown in Fig. 4–55 lies on a plane tilted at an angle ? = 22.0° to the horizontal, with ?k = 0.12. (a) Determine the acceleration of the carton as it slides down the plane. (b) If the carton starts from rest 9.30 m up the plane from its base, what will be the carton’s speed when it reaches the bottom of the incline?
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Chapter : Problem 53 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) A carton is given an initial speed of 3.0 m/s up the 22.0° plane shown in Fig. 4–55. (a) How far up the plane will it go? (b) How much time elapses before it returns to its starting point? Ignore friction.
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Chapter : Problem 54 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 54P A roller coaster reaches the top of the steepest hill with a speed of 6.0 km/h. It then descends the hill, which is at an average angle of 45° and is 45.0m long. Estimate its speed when it reaches the bottom. Assume ?k = 0.18.
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Chapter : Problem 55 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 55P An 18.0-kg box is released on a 37.0° incline and accelerates down the incline at 0.270 m/s2. Find the friction force impeding its motion. How large is the coefficient of kinetic friction?
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Chapter : Problem 12 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 12Q (a) You pull a box with a constant force across a frictionless table using an attached rope held horizontally. If you now pull the rope with the same force at an angle to the horizontal (with the box remaining flat on the table), does the acceleration of the box increase, decrease, or remain the same? Explain. (b) What if there is friction?
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Chapter : Problem 13 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 13P (II) An elevator (mass 4850 kg) is to be designed so that the maximum acceleration is 0.0680g. What are the maximum and minimum forces the motor should exert on the supporting cable?
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Chapter : Problem 13 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 13Q When an object falls freely under the influence of gravity there is a net force mg exerted on it by the Earth. Yet by Newton’s third law the object exerts an equal and opposite force on the Earth. Does the Earth move? Explain.
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Chapter : Problem 14 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 14P (II) A 75-kg petty thief wants to escape from a third-story jail window. Unfortunately, a makeshift rope made of sheets tied together can support a mass of only 58 kg. How might the thief use this “rope” to escape? Give a quantitative answer.
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Chapter : Problem 14 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 14Q Compare the effort (or force) needed to lift a 10-kg object when you are on the Moon with the force needed to lift it on Earth. Compare the force needed to throw a 2-kg object horizontally with a given speed on the Moon and on Earth.
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Chapter : Problem 56 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 56P A small box is held in place against a rough wall by someone pushing on it with a force directed upward at 28° above the horizontal. The coefficients of static and kinetic friction between the box and wall are 0.40 and 0.30, respectively. The box slides down unless the applied force has magnitude 13 N. What is the mass of the box?
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Chapter : Problem 57 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 57P Piles of snow on slippery roofs can become dangerous projectiles as they melt. Consider a chunk of snow at the ridge of a roof with a pitch of 30°. (a) What is the minimum value of the coefficient of static friction that will keep the snow from sliding down? (b) As the snow begins to melt, the coefficient of static friction decreases and the snow eventually slips. Assuming that the distance from the chunk to the edge of the roof is 5.0 m and the coefficient of kinetic friction is 0.20, calculate the speed of the snow chunk when it slides off the roof. (c) If the edge of the roof is 10.0 m above ground, what is the speed of the snow when it hits the ground?
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Chapter : Problem 58 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 58P (a) Show that the minimum stopping distance for an automobile traveling at speed v is equal to v2/2?sg, where ?s is the coefficient of static friction between the tires and the road, and g is the acceleration of gravity. (b) What is this distance for a 1200-kg car traveling 95 km/h if ?s = 0.75?
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Chapter : Problem 59 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 59P A coffee cup on the dashboard of a car slides forward on the dash when the driver decelerates from 45 km/h to rest in 3.5 s or less, but not if he decelerates in a longer time. What is the coefficient of static friction between the cup and the dash?
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Chapter : Problem 60 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 60P A small block of mass m is given an initial speed v0 up a ramp inclined at angle ? to the horizontal. It travels a distance d up the ramp and comes to rest. Determine a formula for the coefficient of kinetic friction between block and ramp.
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Chapter : Problem 15 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 15P A person stands on a bathroom scale in a motionless elevator. When the elevator begins to move, the scale briefly reads only 0.75 of the person’s regular weight. Calculate the acceleration of the elevator, and find the direction of acceleration.
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Chapter : Problem 15 Physics: Principles with Applications 6According to Newton’s third law, each team in a tug of war (Fig. 4-37) pulls with equal force on the other team. What, then, determines which team will win? Figure 4-37 Question 15. A tug of war. Describe the forces on each of the teams and on the rope.
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Chapter : Problem 16 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 16P (II) The cable supporting a 2125-kg elevator has a maximum strength of 21,750 N. What maximum upward acceleration can it give the elevator without breaking?
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Chapter : Problem 16 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A person exerts an upward force of \(40 \mathrm{~N}\) to hold a bag of groceries. Describe the "reaction" force (Newton's third law) by stating (a) its magnitude, (b) its direction, (c) on what object it is exerted, and (d) by what object it is exerted.
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Chapter : Problem 17 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) (a) What is the acceleration of two falling sky divers (mass 132 kg including parachute) when the upward force of air resistance is equal to one-fourth of their weight? (b) After popping open the parachute, the divers descend leisurely to the ground at constant speed. What now is the force of air resistance on the sky divers and their parachute? (See Fig. 4-39)
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Chapter : Problem 61 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(III) The 75-kg climber in Fig. 4-56 is supported in the “chimney” by the friction forces exerted on his shoes and back. The static coefficients of friction between his shoes and the wall, and between his back and the wall, are 0.80 and 0.60, respectively. What is the minimum normal force he must exert? Assume the walls are vertical and that friction forces are both at a maximum. Ignore his grip on the rope. Figure 4-56 Problem 61
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Chapter : Problem 62 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 62P Boxes are moved on a conveyor belt from where they are filled to the packing station 11.0 m away. The belt is initially stationary and must finish with zero speed. The most rapid transit is accomplished if the belt accelerates for half the distance, then decelerates for the final half of the trip. If the coefficient of static friction between a box and the belt is 0.60, what is the minimum transit time for each box?
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Chapter : Problem 63 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(III) A block (mass m1) lying on the frictionless inclined plane is connected to a mass m2 by a massless cord passing over a pulley, as shown in Fig. 4-57. (a) Determine a formula for the acceleration of the system of the two blocks in terms of m1, m2 , and g. (b) What conditions apply to masses m1 and m2 for the acceleration to be in one direction (say, m1 down the plane), or in the opposite direction?
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Chapter : Problem 65 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 65P A bicyclist of mass 65 kg (including the bicycle) can coast down a 6.0° hill at a steady speed of 6.0 km/h because of air resistance. How much force must be applied to climb the hill at the same speed and same air resistance?
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Chapter : Problem 64 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(III) (a) Suppose the coefficient of kinetic friction between \(m_{1}\) and the plane in Fig. 4-57 is \(\mu_{\mathrm{k}}=0.15\), and that \(m_1=m_2=2.7\mathrm{\ kg}\). As \(m_{2}\) moves down, determine the magnitude of the acceleration of \(m_{1}\) and \(m_{2}\), given \(\theta=25^{\circ}\). (b) What smallest value of \(\(\mu_{\mathrm{k}}\) will keep this system from accelerating? Figure 4-57 Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: m_1 mu_k = 0.15 m_1 = m_2 = 2.7 kg m_2 theta = 25 degrees mu_k
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Chapter : Problem 17 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 17Q When you stand still on the ground, how large a force does the ground exert on you? Why doesn’t this force make you rise up into the air?
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Chapter : Problem 18 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 18P A person jumps from the roof of a house 3.9-m high. When he strikes the ground below, he bends his knees so that his torso decelerates over an approximate distance of 0.70 m. If the mass of his torso (excluding legs) is 42 kg, find (a) his velocity just before his feet strike the ground, and (b) the average force exerted on his torso by his legs during deceleration.
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Chapter : Problem 18 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 18Q Whiplash sometimes results from an automobile accident when the victim’s car is struck violently from the rear. Explain why the head of the victim seems to be thrown backward in this situation. Is it really?
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Chapter : Problem 19 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(I) A box weighing 77.0 N rests on a table. A rope tied to the box runs vertically upward over a pulley and a weight is hung from the other end (Fig. 4–40). Determine the force that the table exerts on the box if the weight hanging on the other side of the pulley weighs (a) 30.0 N, (b) 60.0 N, and (c) 90.0 N. Figure 4-40
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Chapter : Problem 19 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 19Q A heavy crate rests on the bed of a flatbed truck. When the truck accelerates, the crate stays fixed on the truck, so it, too, accelerates. What force causes the crate to accelerate?
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Chapter : Problem 66 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 66GP (II) According to a simplified model of a mammalian heart, at each pulse approximately 20 g of blood is accelerated from 0.25 m/s to 0.35 m/s during a period of 0.10 s. What is the magnitude of the force exerted by the heart muscle?
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Chapter : Problem 67 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 67GP A person has a reasonable chance of surviving an automobile crash if the deceleration is no more than 30 “g’s.” Calculate the force on a 70-kg person undergoing this acceleration. What distance is traveled if the person is brought to rest at this rate from 100 km/h?
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Chapter : Problem 68 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 68GP (a) If the horizontal acceleration produced by an earthquake is a, and if an object is going to "hold its place" on the ground, show that the coefficient of static friction with the ground must be at least ?s = a/g. (b) The famous Loma Prieta earthquake that stopped the 1989 World Series produced ground accelerations of up to 4.0 m/s2 in the San Francisco Bay Area. Would a chair have started to slide on a linoleum floor with coefficient of static friction 0.25?
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Chapter : Problem 69 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 69GP An 1150-kg car pulls a 450-kg trailer. The car exerts a horizontal force of 3.8 × 103 N against the ground in order to accelerate. What force does the car exert on the trailer? Assume an effective friction coefficient of 0.15 for the trailer.
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Chapter : Problem 70 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 70GP (II) Police investigators, examining the scene of an accident involving two cars, measure 72-m-long skid marks of one of the cars, which nearly came to a stop before colliding. The coefficient of kinetic friction between rubber and the pavement is about 0.80. Estimate the initial speed of that car assuming a level road.
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Chapter : Problem 20 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Draw the free-body diagram for a basketball player (a) just before leaving the ground on a jump, and (b) while in the air. See Fig. 4–41. Figure 4-41
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Chapter : Problem 20 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 20Q A block is given a brief push so that it slides up a ramp. After the block reaches its highest point, it slides back down, but the magnitude of its acceleration is less on the descent than on the ascent. Why?
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Chapter : Problem 21 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 21P (I) Sketch the free-body diagram of a baseball (a) at the moment it is hit by the bat, and again (b) after it has left the bat and is flying toward the outfield. Ignore air resistance.
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Chapter : Problem 21 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 21Q What would your bathroom scale read if you weighed yourself on an inclined plane? Assume the mechanism functions properly, even at an angle.
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Chapter : Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 22P A 650-N force acts in a northwesterly direction. A second 650-N force must be exerted in what direction so that the resultant of the two forces points westward? Illustrate your answer with a vector diagram.
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Chapter : Problem 71 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 71GP A car starts rolling down a 1-in-4 hill (1-in-4 means that for each 4 m traveled along the sloping road, the elevation change is 1 m). How fast is it going when it reaches the bottom after traveling 55 m? (a) Ignore friction. (b) Assume an effective coefficient of friction equal to 0.10.
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Chapter : Problem 72 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 72GP A 2.0-kg purse is dropped from the top of the Leaning Tower of Pisa and falls 55 m before reaching the ground with a speed of 29 m/s. What was the average force of air resistance?
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Chapter : Problem 73 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 73GP A cyclist is coasting at a steady speed of 12 m/s but enters a muddy stretch where the effective coefficient of friction is 0.60. Will the cyclist emerge from the muddy stretch without having to pedal if the mud lasts for 11 m? If so, what will be the speed upon emerging?
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Chapter : Problem 74 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 74GP A city planner is working on the redesign of a hilly portion of a city. An important consideration is how steep the roads can be so that even low-powered cars can get up the hills without slowing down. A particular small car, with a mass of 1100 kg, can accelerate on a level road from rest to 21 m/s (75 km/h) in 14.0 s. Using these data, calculate the maximum steepness of a hill.
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Chapter : Problem 75 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Francesca, who likes physics experiments, dangles her watch from a thin piece of string while the jetliner she is in takes off from JFK Airport (Fig. 4-58). She notices that the string makes an angle of \(25^{\mathrm{\circ}}\) with respect to the vertical as the aircraft accelerates for takeoff, which takes about 18 s. Estimate the takeoff speed of the aircraft. Figure 4-58 Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: 25 degrees
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Chapter : Problem 23 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) Arlene is to walk across a “high wire” strung horizontally between two buildings 10.0 m apart. The sag in the rope when she is at the midpoint is 10.0°, as shown in Fig. 4–42. If her mass is 50.0 kg, what is the tension in the rope at this point?
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Chapter : Problem 24 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) The two forces and shown in Fig. and (looking down) act on a object on a frictionless tabletop. If and , find the net force on the object and its acceleration for and .
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Chapter : Problem 25 Physics: Principles with Applications 624. (II) One paint bucket is hanging by a massless cord from another paint bucket, also hanging by a massless cord, as shown in Fig. . (a) If the buckets are at rest, what is the tension in each cord? (b) If the two buckets are pulled upward with an acceleration of by the upper cord. calculate the tension in each cord. FIGURE 4-44 Problem 25.
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Chapter : Problem 27 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) Two snowcats tow a housing unit to a new location at McMurdo Base, Antarctica, as shown in Fig. The sum of the forces and exerted on the unit by the horizontal cables is parallel to the line , and . Determine and the magnitude of
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Chapter : Problem 76 Physics: Principles with Applications 6A 28.0-kg block is connected to an empty 1.35-kg bucket by a cord running over a frictionless pulley (Fig. 4–59). The coefficient of static friction between the table and the block is 0.450 and the coefficient of kinetic friction between the table and the block is 0.320. Sand is gradually added to the bucket until the system just begins to move. (a) Calculate the mass of sand added to the bucket. (b) Calculate the acceleration of the system.
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Chapter : Problem 77 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 77GP In the design of a supermarket, there are to be several ramps connecting different parts of the store. Customers will have to push grocery carts up the ramps and it is obviously desirable that this not be too difficult. The engineer has done a survey and found that almost no one complains if the force directed up the ramp is no more than 20 N. Ignoring friction, at what maximum angle ? should the ramps be built, assuming a full 30-kg grocery cart?
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Chapter : Problem 78 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(a) What minimum force F is needed to lift the piano (mass M) using the pulley apparatus shown in Fig. 4–66? (b) Determine the tension in each section of rope: and Assume pulleys are massless and frictionless, and that ropes are massless.
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Chapter : Problem 79 Physics: Principles with Applications 6Problem 79GP A jet aircraft is accelerating at 3.5 m/s2 at an angle of 45° above the horizontal. What is the total force that the cockpit seat exerts on the 75-kg pilot?
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Chapter : Problem 80 Physics: Principles with Applications 6In the design process for a child-restraint chair, an engineer considers the following set of conditions: A 12-kg child is riding in the chair, which is securely fastened to the seat of an automobile (Fig. 4–61). Assume the automobile is involved in a head-on collision with another vehicle. The initial speed v0 of the car is 45 km/h, and this speed is reduced to zero during the collision time of 0.20 s. Assume a constant car deceleration during the collision and estimate the net horizontal force F that the straps of the restraint chair must exert on the child in order to keep her fixed to the chair. Treat the child as a particle and state any additional assumptions made during your analysis.
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Chapter : Problem 26 Physics: Principles with Applications 6(II) A person pushes a 14.0-kg lawn mower at constant speed with a force of directed along the handle, which is at an angle of to the horizontal (Fig. ). (a) Draw the free-body diagram showing all forces acting on the mower. Calculate (b) the horizontal friction force on the mower, then (c) the normal force exerted vertically upward on the mower by the ground. What force must the person exert on the lawn mower to accelerate it from rest to in seconds, assuming the same friction force?
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