Figure 4-21 shows the path taken by a skunk foraging for trash food, from initial point i. The skunk took the same time T to go from each labeled point to the next along its path. Rank points n, b, and c according to the magnitude of the average velocity of the skunk to reach them from initial point i, greatest first.
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Textbook Solutions for Fundamentals of Physics Extended
Question
Figure 4-22 shows the initial position i and the final positionfof a particle. What are the (a) initial position vector ri and (b) final position vector rj, both in unit-vector notation? (c) What is the x component of displacement 11 r?
Solution
The first step in solving 4 problem number 2 trying to solve the problem we have to refer to the textbook question: Figure 4-22 shows the initial position i and the final positionfof a particle. What are the (a) initial position vector ri and (b) final position vector rj, both in unit-vector notation? (c) What is the x component of displacement 11 r?
From the textbook chapter MOTION IN TWO AND THREE DIMENSIONS you will find a few key concepts needed to solve this.
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full solution
Figure 4-22 shows the initial position i and the final
Chapter 4 textbook questions
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Chapter 4: Problem 1 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
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Chapter 4: Problem 2 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Figure 4-22 shows the initial position i and the final positionfof a particle. What are the (a) initial position vector ri and (b) final position vector rj, both in unit-vector notation? (c) What is the x component of displacement 11 r?
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Chapter 4: Problem 3 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
When Paris was shelled from 100 km away with the WWI long-range artillery piece "Big Bertha," the shells were fired at an angle greater than 45 to give them a greater range, possibly even twice as long as at 45. Does that result mean that the air density at high altitudes increases with altitude or decreases?
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Chapter 4: Problem 4 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
You are to launch a rocket, from just above the ground, with one of the following initial velocity vectors: (1) VA = 20i + 70), (2) VA = -201 + 70], (3) VA = 20i - 70], (4) VA = -201 - 70). In your coordinate system, x runs along level ground and y increases upward. (a) Rank the vectors according to the launch speed of the projectile, greatest first. (b) Rank the vectors according to the time of flight of the projectile, greatest first.
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Chapter 4: Problem 5 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Figure 4-23 shows three situations in which identical projectiles are launched (at the same level) at identical initial speeds and angles. The projectiles do not land on the same terrain, however. Rank the situations according to the final speeds of the projectiles just before they land, greatest first.
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Chapter 4: Problem 6 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
The only good use of a fruitcake is in catapult practice. Curve 1 in Fig. 4-24 gives the height y of a catapulted fruitcake versus the QUESTIONS 77 angle (J between its velocity vector and )' its acceleration vector during flight. (a) Which of the lettered points on that curve corresponds to the landing of the fruitcake on the ground? (b) Curve 2 is A B a similar plot for the same launch speed but for a different launch angle. Does the fruitcake now land farther away or closGr tf) the launch point?
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Chapter 4: Problem 7 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
An airplane flying horizontally at Fig. 4-24 Question 6. a constant speed of 350 km/h over level ground releases a bundle of food supplies. Ignore the effect of the air on the bundle. What are the bundle's initial (a) vertical and (b) horizontal components of velocity? (c) What is its horizontal component of velocity just before hitting the ground? (d) If the airplane's speed were, instead, 450 km/h, would the time of fall be longer, shorter, or the same?
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Chapter 4: Problem 8 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In Fig. 4-25, a cream tangerine is thrown up past windows 1,2, and 3, which are identical in size and regularly spaced vertically. Rank those three windows according to (a) the time the cream tangerine takes to pass them and (b) the average speed of the cream tangerine during the passage, greatest first. The cream tangerine then moves down past windows 4, 5, and 6, which are identical in size and irregularly spaced horizontally. Rank those three windows according to ( c) the time the cream tangerine takes to pass them and (d) the average speed of the cream tangerine during the passage, greatest first.
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Chapter 4: Problem 9 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Figure 4-26 shows three paths for a football kicked from ground level. Ignoring the effects of air, rank the paths according to (a) time of flight, (b) initial vertical velocity component, ( c) initial horizontal velocity component, and (d) initial speed, greatest first.
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Chapter 4: Problem 10 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A ball is shot from ground level over level ground at a certain initial speed. Figure 4-27 gives the range R of the ball versus its launch angle (Jo. Rank the three lettered points on the plot according to (a) the total flight time of the ball and (b) the baIl's speed at maximum height, greatest first.
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Chapter 4: Problem 11 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Figure 4-28 shows four tracks (either half- or quarter-circles) that can be taken by a train, which moves at a constant speed. Rank the tracks according to the magnitude of a train's acceleration on the curved portion, greatest first.
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Chapter 4: Problem 12 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In Fig. 4-29, particle P is in uniform circular motion, centered on the origin of an xy coordinate system. (a) At what values of Bis the vertical component ry of the position vector greatest in magnitude? (b) At what values of Bis the vertical component Vy of the particle's velocity greatest in magnitude? (c) At what values of B is the vertical component ay of the particle's acceleration greatest in magnitude?
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Chapter 4: Problem 13 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
(a) Is it possible to be accelerating y --+--+--'-'''-+--x while traveling at constant speed? Is it Fig. 4-29 Question 12. possible to round a curve with (b) zero acceleration and ( c) a constant magnitude of acceleration?
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Chapter 4: Problem 14 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A proton initially has ~ v = 4.,91 - 2.0] + 3.0k and then 4.0 s later has v = -2.0i - 2.0j + 5.0k (in meters per second). For that 4.0 s, what are (a) the proton's average acceleration aavg in unitvector notation, (b) the magnitude ofaavg, and (c) the angle between a avg and the positive direction of the x axis?
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Chapter 4: Problem 15 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A particle leaves the origin with an initial velocity v = (3.00i) m/s and a constant acceleration a = (-1.001 - 0.500J) mls2. When it reaches its maximum x coordinate, what are its (a) velocity and (b) position vector?
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Chapter 4: Problem 16 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
The velocity v of a particle moving in the xy plane is given by v = (6.0t - 4.0t2)1 + 8.0f, with v in meters per second and t ( > 0) in seconds. (a) What is the acceleration when t = 3.0 s? (b) When (if ever) is the acceleration zero? (c) When (if ever) is the velocity zero? (d) When (if ever) does the speed equal 10 mls?
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Chapter 4: Problem 17 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A cart is propelled over an xy plane with acceleration components at = 4.0 m/s2 and ay = -2.0 m/s2 Its initial velocity has components VOx = 8.0 m/s and VOy = 12 m/s. In unit-vector notation, what is the velocity of the cart when it reaches its greatest y coordinate?
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Chapter 4: Problem 18 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A moderate wind accelerates a pebble over a horizontal xy plane with a constant acceleration a = (5.00 mls2)1 + (7.00 m/s2)]. At time t = 0, the velocity is (4.00 m/s)L What are the (a) magnitude and (b) angle of its velocity when it has been displaced by 12.0 m parallel to the x axis?
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Chapter 4: Problem 19 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
The acceleration of a particle moving only on a horizontal xy plane is given by a = 3ti + 4t], where a is in meters per secondsquared and t is in seconds. At t = 0, the position vector r = (20.0 m)i + (40.0 m)] locates the particle, which then has the velocity vector v = (5.00m/s)i + (2.00m/s)].Att = 4.00s,whatare (a) its position vector in unit-vector notation and (b) the angle between its direction of travel and the positive direction of the x axis?
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Chapter 4: Problem 20 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In Fig. 4-32, particle A moves along the line y = 30 m with a constant velocity v of magnitude 3.0 mls and parallel to the x axis. At the instant particle A passes the y axis, particle B leaves the origin with a zero initial speed and a constant acceleration a of magnitude 0.40 B m/s2 What angle (J between a and J v A .~ the positive direction of the y axis would result in a collision?
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Chapter 4: Problem 21 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A dart is thrown horizontally with an initial speed of 10 m/s toward point P, the bull's-eye on a dart board. It hits at point Q on the rim, vertically below P, 0.19 s later. (a) What is the distance PQ? (b) How far away from the dart board is the dart released?
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Chapter 4: Problem 22 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A small ball rolls horizontally off the edge of a tabletop that is 1.20 m high. It strikes the floor at a point 1.52 m horizontally from the table edge. (a) How long is the ball in the air? (b) What is its speed at the instant it leaves the table?
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Chapter 4: Problem 23 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A projectile is fired horizontally from a gun that is 45.0 m above flat ground, emerging from the gun with a speed of 250 m/s. (a) How long does the projectile remain in the air? (b) At what horizontal distance from the firing point does it strike the ground? (c) What is the magnitude of the vertical component of its velocity as it strikes the ground?
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Chapter 4: Problem 24 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In the 1991 World Track and Field Championships in Tokyo, Mike Powell jumped 8.95 m, breaking by a fullS cm the 23- year long-jump record set by Bob Beamon. Assume that Powell's speed on takeoff was 9.5 mls (about equal to that of a sprinter) and that g = 9.80 mls2 in Tokyo. How much less was Powell's range than the maximum possible range for a particle launched at the same speed?
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Chapter 4: Problem 25 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
The current world-record motorcycle jump is 77.0 m, set by Jason Renie. Assume that he left the take-off ramp at 12.0 to the hOlizontal and that the take-off and landing heights are the same. Neglecting air drag, determine his take-off speed.
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Chapter 4: Problem 26 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A stone is catapulted at time t = 0, with an initial velocity of magnitude 20.0 mls and at an angle of 40.0 above the horizontal. What are the magnitudes of the (a) horizontal and (b) vertical components of its displacement from the catapult site at t = 1.10 s? Repeat for the (c) horizontal and (d) vertical components at t = 1.80 s, and for the (e) horizontal and (f) vertical components at t = 5.00 s.
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Chapter 4: Problem 27 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A certain airplane has a speed of 290.0 kmlh and is diving at an angle of (J = 30.0 below the horizontal when the pilot releases a radar decoy (Fig. 4-33). The horizontal distance between the release point and the point where the decoy strikes the ground is d = 700 m. (a) How long is the decoy in the air? (b) How high was the release point?
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Chapter 4: Problem 28 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In Fig. 4-34, a stone is pro- Fig.4-33 Problem 27. jected at a cliff of height h with an initial speed of 42.0 mls directed at angle (Jo = 60.0 above the horizontal. The stone strikes at A, 5.50 s after launching. Find (a) the height h of the cliff, (b) the speed of the stone just before impact at A, and (c) the maximum height H reached above the ground.
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Chapter 4: Problem 29 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A projectile's launch speed is five times its speed at maximum height. Find launch angle 80,
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Chapter 4: Problem 30 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A soccer ball is kicked from the ground with an initial speed of 19.5 mls at an upward angle of 45. A player 55 m away in the direction of the kick starts running to meet the ball at that instant. What must be his average speed if he is to meet the ball just before it hits the ground?
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Chapter 4: Problem 31 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In a jump spike, a volleyball player slams the ball from overhead and toward the opposite floor. Controlling the angle of the spike is difficult. Suppose a ball is spiked from a height of 2.30 m with an initial speed of 20.0 mls at a downward angle of 18.00. How much farther on the opposite floor would it have landed if the downward angle were, instead, 8.000 ?
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Chapter 4: Problem 32 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
You throw a ball toward a wall at speed 25.0 mls and at angle 80 = 40.0 above the horizontal (Fig. 4-35). The wall is distance d = 22.0 m from the release point of the ball. (a) How far above the release point does the ball hit the wall? What are the (b) horizontal and (c) vertical I~-----d------~. Fig. 4-35 Problem 32. components of its velocity as it hits the wall? (d) When it hits, has it passed the highest point on its trajectory?
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Chapter 4: Problem 33 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A plane, diving with constant speed at an angle of 53.0 with the vertical, releases a projectile at an altitude of 730 m. The projectile hits the ground 5.00 s after release. (a) What is the speed of the plane? (b) How far does the projectile travel horizontally during its flight? What are the (c) horizontal and (d) vertical components of its velocity just before striking the ground?
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Chapter 4: Problem 34 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A trebuchet was a hurling machine built to attack the walls of a castle under siege. A large stone could be hurled against a wall to break apart the wall. The machine was not placed near the wall because then arrows could reach it from the castle wall. Instead, it was positioned so that the stone hit the wall during the second half of its flight. Suppose a stone is launched with a speed of Vo = 28.0 mls and at an angle of 80 = 40.0. What is the speed of the stone if it hits the wall (a) just as it reaches the top of its parabolic path and (b) when it has descended to half that height? (c) As a percentage, how much faster is it moving in part (b) than in part (a)?
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Chapter 4: Problem 35 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A rifle that shoots bullets at 460 mls is to be aimed at a target 45.7 m away. If the center of the target is level with the rifle, how high above the target must the rifle barrel be pointed so that the bullet hits dead center?
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Chapter 4: Problem 36 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
During a tennis match, a player serves the ball at 23.6 mis, with the center of the ball leaving the racquet horizontally 2.37 m above the court surface. The net is 12 m away and 0.90 m high. When the ball reaches the net, (a) does the ball clear it and (b) what is the distance between the center of the ball and the top of the net? Suppose that, instead, the ball is served as before but now it leaves the racquet at 5.00 below the horizontal. When the ball reaches the net, (c) does the ball clear it and (d) what now is the distance between the center of the ball and the top of the net?
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Chapter 4: Problem 37 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A lowly high diver pushes off horizontally with a speed of 2.00 mls from the platform edge 10.0 m above the surface of the water. (a) At what horizontal distance from the edge is the diver 0.800 s after pushing off? (b) At what vertical distance above the surface of the water is the diver just then? (c) At what horizontal distance from the edge does the diver strike the water?
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Chapter 4: Problem 38 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A golf ball is struck at ground level. The speed of the golf ball as a function of v; the time is shown in Fig. 4-36, ]: where t = 0 at the instant the '" ball is struck. The scaling on the vertical axis is set by Va = 19 mls and Vh = 31 mls. (a) How far does the golf ball travel horizontally before returning to ground Va o Fig. 4-36 Problem 38. level? (b) What is the maximum height above ground level attained by the ball?
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Chapter 4: Problem 39 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In Fig. 4-37, a ball is thrown leftward from the left edge of the roof, at height h above the ground. The ball hits the ground 1.50 s later, at distance d = 25.0 m from the building and at angle 8 = 60.0 with the horizontal. (a) Find h. (Hint: One way is to reverse the motion, as if on video.) What are the (b) magnitude and (c) angle relative to the horizontal of the velocity at which the ball is thrown? (d) Is the angle above or below the horizontal?
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Chapter 4: Problem 40 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Suppose that a shot putter can put a shot at the worldclass speed Vo = 15.00 mls and at a height of2.l60 m. What horizontal distance would the shot travel if the launch angle 80 is (a) 45.00 and (b) 42.000? The answers indicate that the angle of 45, which maximizes the range of projectile motion, does not maximize the horizontal distance when the launch and landing are at different heights.
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Chapter 4: Problem 41 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Upon spotting an insect on a twig overhanging water, an archer fish squirts water drops at the insect to knock it into the water (Fig. 4-38). Although the fish sees the insect along a straightline path at angle and distance d, a drop must be launched at a different angle 80 if its parabolic path is to intersect the insect. If = 36.0 / / / cf> d// / Insect //on twig / Fig. 4-38 Problem 41. and d = 0.900 m, what launch angle 80 is required for the drop to be at the top of the parabolic path when it reaches the insect?
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Chapter 4: Problem 42 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In 1939 or 1940, Emanuel Zacchini took his humancannonball act to an extreme: After being shot from a cannon, he soared over three Ferris wheels and into a net (Fig. 4-39). Assume that he is launched with a speed of 26.5 mls and at an angle of 53.0. (a) Treating him as a particle, calculate his clearance over the first wheel. (b) If he reached maximum height over the middle wheel, by how much did he clear it? (c) How far from the cannon should the net's center have been positioned (neglect air drag)?
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Chapter 4: Problem 43 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A ball is shot from the ground into the air. At a height of 9.1 m, its velocity is v = (7.6i + 6.1]) mis, with i horizontal and] upward. (a) To what maximum height does the ball rise? (b) What total horizontal distance does the ball travel? What are the (c) magnitude and (d) angle (below the horizontal) of the ball's velocity just before it hits the ground?
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Chapter 4: Problem 44 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A baseball leaves a pitcher's hand horizontally at a speed of 161 kmlh. The distance to the batter is 18.3 m. (a) How long does the ball take to travel the first half of that distance? (b) The second half? (c) How far does the ball fall freely during the first half? (d) During the second half? (e) Why aren't the quantities in (c) and (d) equal?
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Chapter 4: Problem 45 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In Fig. 4-40, a ball is launched with a velocity of magnitude 10.0 mis, at an angle Ball of 50.0 to the horizontal. The launch point is at the base of a ramp of horizontal length d1 = Fig. 4-40 Problem 45. 6.00 m and height d2 = 3.60 m. A plateau is located at the top of the ramp. (a) Does the ball land on the ramp or the plateau? When it lands, what are the (b) magnitude and (c) angle of its displacement from the launch point?
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Chapter 4: Problem 46 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In basketball, hang is an illusion in which a player seems to weaken the gravitational acceleration while in midair. The illusion depends much on a skilled player's ability to rapidly shift the ball between hands during the flight, but it might also be supported by the longer horizontal distance the player travels in the upper part of the jump than in the lower part. If a player jumps with an initial speed of Vo = 7.00 mls at an angle of 80 = 35.0, what percent of the jump's range does the player spend in the upper half of the jump (between maximum height and half maximum height)?
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Chapter 4: Problem 47 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A batter hits a pitched ball when the center of the ball is 1.22 m above the ground. The ball leaves the bat at an angle of 45 with the ground. With that launch, the ball should have a horizontal range (returning to the launch level) of 107 m. (a) Does the ball clear a 7.32-m-high fence that is 97.5 m horizontally from the launch point? (b) At the fence, what is the distance between the fence top and the ball center?
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Chapter 4: Problem 48 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In Fig. 4-41, a ball is thrown up onto a roof, landing 4.00 s later at height h = 20.0 m above the release level. The ball's path just before landing is angled at 8 = 60.0 with the roof. (a) Find the horizontal distance d it travels. (See the hint to Problem 39.) What are the (b) magnitude and (c) angle (relative to the horizontal) Fig. 4-41 Problem 48. of the ball's initial velocity?
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Chapter 4: Problem 49 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A football kicker can give the ball an initial speed of 25 m/s. What are the (a) least and (b) greatest elevation angles at which he can kick the ball to score a field goal from a point 50 m in PROB LEMS 81 front of goalposts whose horizontal bar is 3.44 m above the ground?
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Chapter 4: Problem 50 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Two seconds after being projected from ground level, a projectile is displaced 40 m horizontally and 53 m vertically above its launch point. What are the (a) horizontal and (b) vertical components of the initial velocity of the projectile? (c) At the instant the projectile achieves its maximum height above ground level, how far is it displaced horizontally from the launch point?
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Chapter 4: Problem 51 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A skilled skier knows to jump upward before reaching a downward slope. Consider a jump in which the launch speed is Vo = 10 mis, the launch angle is 80 = 9.0, the initial course is approximately flat, and the steeper track has a slope of 11.3. Figure 4-42a shows a prejump that allows the skier to land on the top portion of the steeper track. Figure 4-42b shows a jump at the edge of the steeper track. In Fig. 4-42a, the skier lands at approximately the launch level. (a) In the landing, what is the angle between the skier's path and the slope? In Fig. 4-42b, (b) how far below the launch level does the skier land and (c) what is ? (The greater fall and greater can result in loss of control in the landing.)
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Chapter 4: Problem 52 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A ball is to be shot from level ground toward a wall at distance x (Fig. 4-43a). Figure 4-43b shows the y component v)' of the ball's velocity just as it would reach the wall, as a function of that distance x. The scaling is set by v)'s = 5.0 mls and Xs = 20 m.What is the launch angle?
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Chapter 4: Problem 53 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In Fig. 4-44, a baseball is hit at a height h = 1.00 m and then caught at the same height. It travels alongside a wall, moving up past the top of the wall 1.00 s after it is hit and then down past the top of the wall 4.00 s later, at distance D = 50.0 m farther along the wall. (a) What horizontal distance is traveled by the ball from hit to catch? What are the (b) magnitude and (c) angle (relative to the horizontal) of the ball's velocity just after being hit? (d) How high is the wall?
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Chapter 4: Problem 54 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A ball is to be shot from level ground with a certain speed. Figure 4-45 shows the range R it will have ~ versus the launch angle Bo. The value of Bo determines the flight time; let tmax represent the maximum flight time. What is the least speed the ball will have during its flight if Bo is choo sen such that the flight time is 0.500tmax?
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Chapter 4: Problem 55 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A ball rolls horizontally off the top of a stairway with a speed of 1.52 m/s. The steps are 20.3 cm high and 20.3 cm wide. Which step does the ball hit first?
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Chapter 4: Problem 56 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
An Earth satellite moves in a circular orbit 640 km above Earth's surface with a period of 98.0 min. What are the (a) speed and (b) magnitude of the centripetal acceleration of the satellite?
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Chapter 4: Problem 57 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A carnival merry-go-round rotates about a vertical axis at a constant rate. A man standing on the edge has a constant speed of 3.66 mis and a centripetal acceleration a of magnitude 1.83 m/s2 Position vector 1 locates him relative to the rotation axis. (a) What is the magnitude of 1? What is the direction of 1 when a is directed (b) due east and (c) due south?
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Chapter 4: Problem 58 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A rotating fan completes 1200 revolutions every minute. Consider the tip of a blade, at a radius of 0.15 m. (a) Through what distance does the tip move in one revolution? What are (b) the tip's speed and (c) the magnitude of its acceleration? (d) What is the period of the motion?
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Chapter 4: Problem 59 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A woman rides a carnival Ferris wheel at radius 15 m, completing five turns about its horizontal axis every minute. What are (a) the period of the motion, the (b) magnitude and (c) direction of her centripetal acceleration at the highest point, and the (d) magnitude and (e) direction of her centripetal acceleration at the lowest point?
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Chapter 4: Problem 60 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A centripetal-acceleration addict rides in uniform circular motion with period T = 2.0 s and radius r = 3.00 m. At tl his acceleration is a = (6.00 m/s2)i + (-4.00 mis2)]. At that instant, what arethevaluesof(a)vaand(b)1 x a?
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Chapter 4: Problem 61 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
When a large star becomes a supernova, its core may be compressed so tightly that it becomes a neutron stm; with a radius of about 20 km (about the size of the San Francisco area). If a neutron star rotates once every second, (a) what is the speed of a particle on the star's equator and (b) what is the magnitude of the particle's centripetal acceleration? (c) If the neutron star rotates faster, do the answers to (a) and (b) increase, decrease, or remain the same?
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Chapter 4: Problem 62 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
What is the magnitude of the acceleration of a sprinter running at 10 m/s when rounding a turn of radius 25 m?
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Chapter 4: Problem 63 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
At tl = 2.00 s, the acceleration of a particle in counterclockwise circular motion is (6.00 m/s2)1 + (4.00 m/s2)]. It moves at constant speed. At time t2 = 5.00 s, the particle's acceleration is (4.00 mis2)i + (-6.00 m/s2)]. What is the radius of the path taken by the particle if t2 - tl is less than one period?
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Chapter 4: Problem 64 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A particle moves horizontally in uniform circular motion, over a horizontal xy plane. At one instant, it moves through the point at coordinates (4.00 m, 4.00 m) with a velocity of -5.001 m/s and an acceleration of +12.5J mis2. What are the (a) x and (b) Y coordinates of the center of the circular path?
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Chapter 4: Problem 65 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A purse at radius 2.00 m and a wallet at radius 3.00 m travel in uniform circular motion on the floor of a merry-go-round as the ride turns. They are on the same radial line. At one instant, the acceleration of the purse is (2.00 mis2)1 + (4.00 m/s2)]. At that instant and in unit-vector notation, what is the acceleration of the wallet?
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Chapter 4: Problem 66 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A particle moves along a circular path over a horizontal xy coordinate system, at constant speed. At time t) = 4.00 s, it is at point (5.00 m, 6.00 m) with velocity (3.00 mis)J and acceleration in the positive x direction. At time t2 = 10.0 s, it has velocity ( - 3.00 mis)1 and acceleration in the positive y direction. What are the (a) x and (b) y coordinates of the center of the circular path if t2 - tl is less than one period?
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Chapter 4: Problem 67 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A boy whirls a stone in a horizontal circle of radius 1.5 m and at height 2.0 m above level ground. The string breaks, and the stone flies off horizontally and strikes the ground after traveling a horizontal distance of 10 m. What is the magnitude of the centripetal acceleration of the stone during the circular motion?
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Chapter 4: Problem 68 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A cat rides a merry-go-round turning with uniform circular motion. At time tl = 2.00 s, the cat's velocity is VI = (3.00 m/s)i + (4.00 m/s)], measured on a horizontal xy coordinate system. At t2 = 5.00 s, the cat's velocity is V2 = (-3.00 mis)i + (-4.00 m/s)]. What are (a) the magnitude of the cat's centripetal acceleration and (b) the cat's average acceleration during the time interval t2 - t1> which is less than one period?
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Chapter 4: Problem 69 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A cameraman on a pickup truck is traveling westward at 20 km/h while he records a cheetah that is moving westward 30 km/h faster than the truck. Suddenly, the cheetah stops, turns, and then runs at 45 kmih eastward, as measured by a suddenly nervous crew member who stands alongside the cheetah's path. The change in the animal's velocity takes 2.0 s. What are the (a) magnitude and (b) direction of the animal's acceleration according to the cameraman and the (c) magnitude and (d) direction according to the nervous crew member?
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Chapter 4: Problem 70 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A boat is traveling upstream in the positive direction of an x axis at 14 kmih with respect to the water of a river. The water is flowing at 9.0 kmih with respect to the ground. What are the (a) magnitude and (b) direction of the boat's velocity with respect to the ground? A child on the boat walks from front to rear at 6.0 km/h with respect to the boat. What are the (c) magnitude and (d) direction of the child's velocity with respect to the ground?
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Chapter 4: Problem 71 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A suspicious-looking man runs as fast as he can along a moving sidewalk from one end to the other, taking 2.50 s. Then security agents appear, and the man runs as fast as he can back along the sidewalk to his starting point, taking 10.0 s. What is the ratio of the man's running speed to the sidewalk's speed?
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Chapter 4: Problem 72 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A rugby player runs with the ball directly toward his opponent's goal, along the positive direction of an x axis. He can legally pass the ball to a teammate as long as the ball's velocity relative to the field does not have a positive x component. Suppose the player runs at speed 4.0 m/s relative to the field while he passes the ball with velocity V BP relative to himself. If v BP has magnitude 6.0 mis, what is the smallest angle it can have for the pass to be legal?
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Chapter 4: Problem 73 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Two highways intersect as shown in Fig. 4-46. At the instant shown, a police car P is distance dp = 800 m from the intersection and moving at speed Vp = 80 km/h. Motorist M is distance dM = 600 m from the intersection and moving at speed vM = 60 kmlh. (a) In unit-vector notation, what is the velocity of the motorist with respect to the police car? (b) For the instant shown in Fig. 4-46, what is the angle between the velocity found in (a) and the line of sight between the two cars? (c) If the cars maintain their velocities, do the answers to (a) and (b) change as the cars move nearer the intersection?
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Chapter 4: Problem 74 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
After flying for 15 min in a wind blowing 42 kmlh at an angle of 20 south of east, an airplane pilot is over a town that is 55 km due north of the starting point. What is the speed of the airplane relative to the air?
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Chapter 4: Problem 75 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A train travels due south at 30 mls (relative to the ground) in a rain that is blown toward the south by the wind. The path of each raindrop makes an angle of 70 with the vertical, as measured by an observer stationary on the ground. An observer on the train, however, sees the drops fall perfectly vertically. Determine the speed of the raindrops relative to the ground.
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Chapter 4: Problem 76 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A light plane attains an airspeed of 500 km/h. The pilot sets out for a destination 800 km due north but discovers that the plane must be headed 20.0 east of due north to fly there directly. The plane arrives in 2.00 h. What were the (a) magnitude and (b) direction of the wind velocity?
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Chapter 4: Problem 77 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Snow is falling vertically at a constant speed of 8.0 m/s. At what angle from the vertical do the snowflakes appear to be falling as viewed by the driver of a car traveling on a straight, level road with a speed of 50 kmlh?
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Chapter 4: Problem 78 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In the overhead view of Fig. 4-47, Jeeps P and Brace along straight lines, across flat terrain, and past stationmy border guard A. Relative to the guard, B travels at a constant speed of 20.0 mis, at the angle O2 = 30.0. Relative to the guard, P has accelerated from rest at a constant rate of 0.400 mls2 at the p A B angle OJ = 60.0. At a certain Fig. 4-47 Problem 78. time during the acceleration, P has a speed of 40.0 mls.At that time, what are the (a) magnitude and (b) direction of the velocity of P relative to B and the (c) magnitude and (d) direction of the acceleration of P relative to B?
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Chapter 4: Problem 79 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Two ships, A and B, leave port at the same time. Ship A travels northwest at 24 knots, and ship B travels at 28 knots in a direction 40 west of south. (1 knot = 1 nautical mile per hour; see Appendix D.) What are the (a) magnitude and (b) direction of the velocity of ship A relative to B? (c) After what time will the ships be 160 nautical miles apart? (d) What will be the bearing of B (the direction of B's position) relative to A at that time?
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Chapter 4: Problem 80 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A 200-m-wide river flows due east at a uniform speed of 2.0 m/s. A boat with a speed of 8.0 mls relative to the water leaves the south bank pointed in a direction 30 west of north. What are the (a) magnitude and (b) direction of the boat's velocity relative to the ground? (c) How long does the boat take to cross the river?
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Chapter 4: Problem 81 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Ship A is located 4.0 km north and 2.5 km east of ship B. Ship A has a velocity of 22 kmlh toward the south, and ship B has a velocity of 40 kmlh in a direction 37 north of east. (a) What is the velocity of A relative to B in unit-vector notation with i toward the east? (b) Write an expression (in terms of i and J) for the position of A relative to B as a function of t, where t = 0 when the ships are in the positions described above. (c) At what time is the separation between the ships least? (d) What is that least separation?
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Chapter 4: Problem 82 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A 200-m-wide river has a uniform flow speed of 1.1 mls through a jungle and toward the east. An explorer wishes to leave a small clearing on the south bank and cross the river in a powerboat that moves at a constant speed of 4.0 mls with respect to the water. There is a clearing on the north bank 82 m upstream from a point directly opposite the clearing on the south bank. (a) In what direction must the boat be pointed in order to travel in a straight line and land in the clearing on the north bank? (b) How long will the boat take to cross the river and land in the clearing?
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Chapter 4: Problem 83 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A woman who can row a boat at 6.4 kmlh in still water faces a long, straight river with a width of 6.4 km and a current of 3.2 kmlh. Let i point directly across the river and J point directly downstream. If she rows in a straight line to a point directly opposite her starting position, (a) at what angle to i must she point the boat and (b) how long will she take? (c) How long will she take if, instead, she rows 3.2 km down the river and then back to her starting point? (d) How long if she rows 3.2 km lip the river and then back to her starting point? (e) At what angle to i should she point the boat if she wants to cross the river in the shortest possible time? (f) How long is that shortest time?
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Chapter 4: Problem 84 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In Fig. 4-48a, a sled moves in the negative x direction at constant speed Vs while a ball of ice is shot from the sled with a velocity Vo = vo) + Voy] relative to the sled. When the ball lands, its horizontal displacement t.Xbg relative to the ground (from its launch position to its landing position) is measured. Figure 4-48b gives t.Xbg as a function of VS' Assume the ball lands at approximately its launch height. What are the values of (a) VOx and (b) va}'? The ball's displacement t.Xbs relative to the sled can also be measured. Assume that the sled's velocity is not changed when the ball is shot. What is t.Xbs when Vs is ( c) 5.0 mls and (d) 15 mJs?
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Chapter 4: Problem 85 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
You are kidnapped by political-science majors (who are upset because you told them political science is not a real science). Although blindfolded, you can tell the speed of their car (by the whine of the engine), the time of travel (by mentally counting off seconds), and the direction of travel (by turns along the rectangular street system). From these clues, you know that you are taken along the following course: 50 kmJh for 2.0 min, turn 90 to the right, 20 kmJh for 4.0 min, turn 90 to the right, 20 kmlh for 60 s, turn 90 to the left, 50 kmJh for 60 s, turn 90 to the right, 20 kmlh for 2.0 min, turn 90 to the left, 50 kmJh for 30 s. At that point, (a) how far are you from your starting point, and (b) in what direction relative to your initial direction of travel are you?
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Chapter 4: Problem 86 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In Fig. 4-49, a radar station detects an airplane approaching directly from the east. At first observation, the airplane is at distance d, = 360 m from the station and at angle 0, = 40 above the horizon. The airplane is tracked through an angular change t.o = 123 in the vertical east-west plane; its distance is then dz = 790 m. Find the (a) magnitude and (b) direction of the airplane's displacement during this period.
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Chapter 4: Problem 87 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A baseball is hit at ground level. The ball reaches its maximum height above ground level 3.0 s after being hit. Then 2.5 s after reaching its maximum height, the ball barely clears a fence that is 97.5 m from where it was hit. Assume the ground is level. (a) What maximum height above ground level is reached by the ball? (b) How high is the fence? (c) How far beyond the fence does the ball strike the ground?
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Chapter 4: Problem 88 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Long flights at mid latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere encounter the jet stream, an eastward airflow that can affect a plane'S speed relative to Earth's surface. If a pilot maintains a certain speed relative to the air (the plane's airspeed), the speed relative to the surface (the plane's ground speed) is more when the flight is in the direction of the jet stream and less when the flight is opposite the jet stream. Suppose a round-trip flight is scheduled between two cities separated by 4000 km, with the outgoing flight in the direction of the jet stream and the return flight opposite it. The airline computer advises an airspeed of 1000 kmlh, for which the difference in flight times for the outgoing and return flights is 70.0 min. What jet-stream speed is the computer using?
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Chapter 4: Problem 89 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A particle starts from the origin at t = 0 with a velocity of 8.0J mls and moves in the xy plane with constant acceleration (4.01 + 2.0J) mJsz . When the particle's x coordinate is 29 m, what are its (a) y coordinate and (b) speed?
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Chapter 4: Problem 90 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
At what initial speed must the basketball player in Fig. 4-50 throw the ball, at angle 00 = 55 above the horizontal, to make the foul shot? The horizontal distances are d, = 1.0 ft and dz = 14 ft, and the heights are h, = 7.0 ft and hz = 10 ft.
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Chapter 4: Problem 91 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
During volcanic eruptions, chunks of solid rock can be blasted out of the volcano; these projectiles are Fig. 4-50 Problem 90. called volcanic bombs. Figure 4-51 shows a cross section of Mt. Fuji, in Japan. (a) At what initial speed would a bomb have to be ejected, at angle 00 = 35 to the horizontal, from the vent at A in order to fall at the foot of the volcano at B, at vertical distance h = 3.30 km and horizontal distance d = 9.40 km? Ignore, for the moment, the effects of air on the bomb's travel. (b) What would be the time of flight? (c) Would the effect of the air increase or decrease your answer in (a)?
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Chapter 4: Problem 92 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
An astronaut is rotated in a horizontal centrifuge at a radius of 5.0 m. (a) What is the astronaut's speed if the centripetal acceleration has a magnitude of 7.0g? (b) How many revolutions per minute are required to produce this acceleration? (c) What is the period of the motion?
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Chapter 4: Problem 93 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Oasis A is 90 km due west of oasis B. A desert camel leaves A and takes 50 h to walk 75 km at 37 north of due east. Next it takes 35 h to walk 65 km due south. Then it rests for 5.0 h. What are the (a) magnitude and (b) direction of the camel's displacement relative to A at the resting point? From the time the camel leaves A until the end of the rest period, what are the (c) magnitude and (d) direction of its average velocity and (e) its average speed? The camel's last drink was at A; it must be at B no more than 120 h later for its next drink. If it is to reach B just in time, what must be the (f) magnitude and (g) direction of its average velocity after the rest period?
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Chapter 4: Problem 94 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Curtain of death. A large metallic asteroid strikes Earth and quickly digs a crater into the rocky material below ground level by launching rocks upward and outward. The following table gives five pairs of launch speeds and angles (from the horizontal) for such rocks, based on a model of crater formation. (Other rocks, with intermediate speeds and angles, are also launched.) Suppose that you are at x = 20 km when the asteroid strikes the ground at time t = 0 and position x = 0 (Fig. 4-52). (a) At t = 20 s, what are the x and y coordinates of the rocks headed in your direction from launches A through E? (b) Plot these coordinates and then sketch a curve through the points to include rocks with intermediate launch speeds and angles. The curve should indicate what you would see as you look up into the approaching rocks and what dinosaurs must have seen during asteroid strikes long ago.
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Chapter 4: Problem 95 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Figure 4-53 shows the straight path of a paI'ticle across an xy coordinate system as the particle is accelerated from rest during time interval ~tl' The acceleration is constant. The xy coordinates for point A are (4.00 m, 6.00 m); those for point Bare (12.0 m, 18.0 m). (a) What is the ratio ayla, of the acceleration components? (b) What are the coordinates of the particle if the motion is continued for another interval equal to MI?
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Chapter 4: Problem 96 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
For women's volleyball the top of the net is 2.24 m above the floor and the court measures 9.0 m by 9.0 m on each side of the net. Using a jump serve, a player strikes the ball at a point that is 3.0 m above the floor and a horizontal distance of 8.0 m from the net. If the initial velocity of the ball is horizontal, (a) what minimum magnitude must it have if the ball is to clear the net and (b) what maximum magnitude can it have if the ball is to strike the floor inside the back line on the other side of the net?
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Chapter 4: Problem 97 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A rifle is aimed horizontally at a target 30 m away. The bullet hits the target 1.9 cm below the aiming point. What are (a) the bullet's time of flight and (b) its speed as it emerges from the rifle?
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Chapter 4: Problem 98 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A particle is in uniform circular motion about the origin of an xy coordinate system, moving clockwise with a period of 7.00 s. At one instant, its position vector (measured from the origin) is r = (2.00 m)i - (3.00 m)]. At that instant, what is its velocity in unit-vector notation?
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Chapter 4: Problem 99 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In Fig. 4-54, a lump of wet putty moves in uniform circular motion as it rides at a radius of 20.0 cm on the rim of a wheel rotating counterclockwise with a period of 5.00 ms. The lump then happens to fly off the rim at the 5 o'clock position (as if on a clock face). It leaves the rim at a height of h = 1.20 m from the floor and at a distance d = 2.50 m from a wall. At what height on the wall does the lump hit?
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Chapter 4: Problem 100 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
An iceboat sails across the surface of a frozen lake with constant acceleration produced by the wind. At a certain instant the boat's velocity is (6.301 - 8.42J) mls. Three seconds later, because of a wind shift, the boat is instantaneously at rest. What is its average acceleration for this 3.00 s interval?
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Chapter 4: Problem 101 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In Fig. 4-55, a ball is shot directly upward from the ground with an initial speed of Va = 7.00 m/s. Simultaneously, a construction elevator cab begins to move upward from the ground with a constant speed of Vc = 3.00 m/s. What maxi- Fig.4-55 Problem 101. mum height does the ball reach relative to (a) the ground and (b) the cab floor? At what rate does the speed of the ball change relative to (c) the ground and (d) the cab floor?
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Chapter 4: Problem 102 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A magnetic field can force a charged particle to move in a circular path. Suppose that an electron moving in a circle experiences a radial acceleration of magnitude 3.0 X 1014 mls2 in a particular magnetic field. (a) What is the speed of the electron if the radius of its circular path is 15 cm? (b) What is the period of the motion?
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Chapter 4: Problem 103 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
In 3.50 h, a balloon drifts 21.5 km north, 9.70 km east, and 2.88 km upward from its release point on the ground. Find (a) the magnitude of its average velocity and (b) the angle its average velocity makes with the horizontal.
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Chapter 4: Problem 104 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A ball is thrown horizontally from a height of 20 m and hits the ground with a speed that is three times its initial speed. What is the initial speed?
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Chapter 4: Problem 105 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A projectile is launched with an initial speed of 30 mls at an angle of 60 above the horizontal. What are the (a) magnitude and (b) angle of its velocity 2.0 s after launch, and (c) is the angle above or below the hOlizontal? What are the (d) magnitude and (e) angle of its velocity 5.0 s after launch, and (f) is the angle above or below the horizontal?
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Chapter 4: Problem 106 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
TIle position vector for a proto,? is )nitially r = 5.01 - 6.0J + 2.0k and then later is r = -2.0i + 6.0j + 2.0k, all in meters. (a) What is the proton's displacement vector, and (b) to what plane is that vector parallel?
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Chapter 4: Problem 107 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A particle P travels with constant speed on a circle of radius r = 3.00 m (Fig. 4-56) and completes one revolution in 20.0 s. The particle passes through 0 at time t = O. State the following vectors in magnitudeangle notation (angle relative to the positive direction of x). With respect to 0, find the particle's position vector at the times t of (a) 5.00 s, (b) 7.50 s, and (c) 10.0 s. (d) For the 5.00 s interval from the end of the fifth second to the end y ---~--I~-"------ x o Fig.4-56 Problem 107. of the tenth second, find the particle's displacement. For that interval, find (e) its average velocity and its velocity at the (f) beginning and (g) end. Next, find the acceleration at the (h) beginning and (i) end of that interval.
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Chapter 4: Problem 108 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
The fast French train known as the TGV (Train a Grande Vitesse) has a scheduled average speed of 216 km/h. (a) If the train goes around a curve at that speed and the magnitude of the acceleration experienced by the passengers is to be limited to 0.050g, what is the smallest radius of curvature for the track that can be tolerated? (b) At what speed must the train go around a curve with a 1.00 km radius to be at the acceleration limit?
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Chapter 4: Problem 109 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
(a) If an electron is projected horizontally with a speed of 3.0 X 106 mis, how far will it fall in traversing 1.0 m of horizontal distance? (b) Does the answer increase or decrease if the initial speed is increased?
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Chapter 4: Problem 110 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A person walks up a stalled 15-m-Iong escalator in 90 s. When standing on the same escalator, now moving, the person is carried up in 60 s. How much time would it take that person to walk up the moving escalator? Does the answer depend on the length of the escalator?
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Chapter 4: Problem 111 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
(a) What is the magnitude of the centripetal acceleration of an object on Earth's equator due to the rotation of Earth? (b) What would Earth's rotation period have to be for objects on the equator to have a centripetal acceleration of magnitude 9.8 m/s2?
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Chapter 4: Problem 112 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
The range of a projectile depends not only on Vo and ()o but also on the value g of the free-fall acceleration, which varies from place to place. In 1936, Jesse Owens established a world's running broad jump record of 8.09 m at the Olympic Games at Berlin (where g = 9.8128 m/s2). Assuming the same values of Vo and ()o, by how much would his record have differed if he had competed instead in 1956 at Melbourne (where g = 9.7999 mls2)?
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Chapter 4: Problem 113 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
Figure 4-57 shows the path )' taken by a drunk skunk over level ground, from initial point i to final point f The angles are ()i = 30.00 , ()2 = 50.00 , and ()3 = 80.00 , and the distances are di = 5.00 m, d2 = 8.00 m, and d3 = 12.0 m. What are the (a) magnitude and (b) angle of the skunk's displacement from i to f?
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Chapter 4: Problem 114 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
The position vector 7 of a particle moving in the xy plane is 7 = 2ti + 2 sin[ (7T/4 rad/s )t]], with ----I---~---''--'---x 7 in meters and t in seconds. (a) Fig.4-57 Problem 113. Calculate the x and y components of the particle's position at t = 0,1.0,2.0,3.0, and 4.0 s and sketch the particle's path in the xy plane for the interval 0 :::; t :::; 4.0 s. (b) Calculate the components of the particle's velocity at t = 1.0, 2.0, and 3.0 s. Show that the velocity is tangent to the path of the particle and in the direction the particle is moving at each time by drawing the velocity vectors on the plot of the particle's path in part (a). (c) Calculate the components of the particle's acceleration at t = 1.0,2.0, and 3.0 s.
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Chapter 4: Problem 115 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
An electron having an initial horizontal velocity of magnitude 1.00 X 109 cm/s travels into the region between two horizontal metal plates that are electrically charged. In that region, the electron travels a horizontal distance of 2.00 cm and has a constant downward acceleration of magnitude 1.00 X 1017 cm/s2 due to the charged plates. Find (a) the time the electron takes to travel the 2.00 cm, (b) the vertical distance it travels during that time, and the magnitudes of its (c) horizontal and (d) vertical velocity components as it emerges from the region.
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Chapter 4: Problem 116 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
An elevator without a ceiling is ascending with a constant speed of 10 m/s. A boy on the elevator shoots a ball directly upward, from a height of 2.0 m above the elevator floor, just as the elevator floor is 28 m above the ground. The initial speed of the ball with respect to the elevator is 20 m/s. (a) What maximum height above the ground does the ball reach? (b) How long does the ball take to return to the elevator floor?
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Chapter 4: Problem 117 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A football player punts the football so that it will have a "hang time" (time of flight) of 4.5 s and land 46 m away. If the ball leaves the player's foot 150 cm above the ground, what must be the (a) magnitude and (b) angle (relative to the horizontal) of the ball's initial velocity?
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Chapter 4: Problem 118 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
An airport terminal has a moving sidewalk to speed passengers through a long corridor. Larry does not use the moving sidewalk; he takes 150 s to walk through the corridor. Curly, who simply stands on the moving sidewalk, covers the same distance in 70 s. Moe boards the sidewalk and walks along it. How long does Moe take to move through the corridor? Assume that Larry and Moe walk at the same speed.
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Chapter 4: Problem 119 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 9
A wooden boxcar is moving along a straight railroad track at speed Vi' A sniper fires a bullet (initial speed V2) at it from a highpowered rifle. The bullet passes through both lengthwise walls of the car, its entrance and exit holes being exactly opposite each other as viewed from within the car. From what direction, relative to the track, is the bullet fired? Assume that the bullet is not deflected upon entering the car, but that its speed decreases by 20%. Take Vi = 85 kmlh and V2 = 650 mls. (Why don't you need to know the width of the boxcar?)
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