University Physics with Modern Physics (14th Edition)
14th Edition
ISBN: 9780321973610
Author: Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Question
Chapter 8, Problem 8.18DQ
To determine
The speed of the system’s center of mass after the rifle is fired if in example
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
Wind
energy
is gaining increased attention, generating an
increased interest in windmill technology. Because
windmill blades (vanes) rotate about a central axis, one of
the most important physical properties of a windmill is its
moment of inertia.
Given is a picture of a typical windmill, where the
Center
of mass
geometry and center of mass of one of the vanes is
illustrated. The mass of each vane is 207 kg. The distance
from the center of mass of the vane to axis B is
k, = 2.45 m. The distance from the center of mass of the
vane to the center of the windmill hub is k,
= 3.80 m.
If the moment of inertia of a vane about axis A is
241 kg-m2 and about axis B is 5860 kg-m2, calculate the
moment of inertia Itotal of the entire assembly about the
axis that passes through the windmill's hub and is
perpendicular to the screen. (Ignore the hub and assume
the vanes are flat.)
I total
kg-m?
II
Chapter 8 Solutions
University Physics with Modern Physics (14th Edition)
Ch. 8.1 - Rank the following situations according to the...Ch. 8.2 - A spring-loaded toy sits at rest on a horizontal,...Ch. 8.3 - For each situation, state whether the collision is...Ch. 8.4 - Prob. 8.4TYUCh. 8.5 - Will the center of mass in Fig. 8.32 continue on...Ch. 8.6 - (a) If a rocket in gravity-free outer space has...Ch. 8 - In splitting logs with a hammer and wedge, is a...Ch. 8 - Suppose you catch a baseball and then someone...Ch. 8 - When rain falls from the sky, what happens to its...Ch. 8 - A car has the same kinetic energy when it is...
Ch. 8 - A truck is accelerating as it speeds down the...Ch. 8 - (a) If the momentum of a single point object is...Ch. 8 - A woman holding a large rock stands on a...Ch. 8 - In Example 8.7 (Section 8.3), where the two...Ch. 8 - In a completely inelastic collision between two...Ch. 8 - Since for a particle the kinetic energy is given...Ch. 8 - In each of Examples 8.10, 8.11, and 8.12 (Section...Ch. 8 - A glass dropped on the floor is more likely to...Ch. 8 - In Fig. 8.23b, the kinetic energy of the Ping-Pong...Ch. 8 - A machine gun is fired at a steel plate. Is the...Ch. 8 - A net force of 4 N acts on an object initially at...Ch. 8 - A net force with x-component Fx acts on an object...Ch. 8 - A tennis player hits a tennis ball with a racket....Ch. 8 - Prob. 8.18DQCh. 8 - An egg is released from rest from the roof of a...Ch. 8 - A woman stands in the middle of a perfectly...Ch. 8 - At the highest point in its parabolic trajectory,...Ch. 8 - When an object breaks into two pieces (explosion,...Ch. 8 - An apple falls from a tree and feels no air...Ch. 8 - Two pieces of clay collide and stick together....Ch. 8 - Two objects of mass M and 5M are at rest on a...Ch. 8 - A very heavy SUV collides head-on with a very...Ch. 8 - (a) What is the magnitude of the momentum of a...Ch. 8 - In a certain track and field event, the shotput...Ch. 8 - Objects A, B, and C are moving as shown in Fig....Ch. 8 - Two vehicles are approaching an intersection. One...Ch. 8 - One 110-kg football lineman is running to the...Ch. 8 - BIO Biomechanics. The mass of a regulation tennis...Ch. 8 - Force of a Golf Swing. A 0.0450-kg golf ball...Ch. 8 - Force of a Baseball Swing. A baseball has mass...Ch. 8 - A 0.160-kg hockey puck is moving on an icy,...Ch. 8 - A bat strikes a 0.145-kg baseball. Just before...Ch. 8 - CALC At time t = 0 a 2150-kg rocket in outer space...Ch. 8 - BIO Bone Fracture. Experimental tests have shown...Ch. 8 - A 2.00-kg stone is sliding to the right on a...Ch. 8 - CALC Starting at t = 0, a horizontal net force F =...Ch. 8 - To warm up for a match, a tennis player hits the...Ch. 8 - A 68.5-kg astronaut is doing a repair in space on...Ch. 8 - The expanding gases that leave the muzzle of a...Ch. 8 - Two figure skaters, one weighing 625 N and the...Ch. 8 - BIO Animal Propulsion. Squids and octopuses propel...Ch. 8 - You are standing on a sheet of ice that covers the...Ch. 8 - On a frictionless. horizontal air table, puck A...Ch. 8 - When cars are equipped with flexible bumpers, they...Ch. 8 - Two identical 0.900-kg masses are pressed against...Ch. 8 - Block A in Fig. E8.24 has mass 1.00 kg, and block...Ch. 8 - A hunter on a frozen, essentially frictionless...Ch. 8 - An atomic nucleus suddenly bursts apart (fissions)...Ch. 8 - Two ice skaters. Daniel (mass 65.0 kg) and Rebecca...Ch. 8 - You are standing on a large sheet of frictionless...Ch. 8 - You (mass 55 kg) are riding a frictionless...Ch. 8 - An astronaut in space cannot use a conventional...Ch. 8 - Asteroid Collision. Two asteroids of equal mass in...Ch. 8 - Two skaters collide and grab on to each other on...Ch. 8 - A 15.0-kg fish swimming at 1.10 m/s suddenly...Ch. 8 - Two fun-loving otters are sliding toward each...Ch. 8 - Deep Impact Mission. In July 2005, NASAs Deep...Ch. 8 - A 1050-kg sports car is moving westbound at 15.0...Ch. 8 - On a very muddy football field, a 110-kg...Ch. 8 - Accident Analysis. Two cars collide at an...Ch. 8 - Jack (mass 55.0 kg) is sliding due east with speed...Ch. 8 - BIO Bird Defense. To protect their young in the...Ch. 8 - At the intersection of Texas Avenue and University...Ch. 8 - A 5.00-g bullet is fired horizontally into a...Ch. 8 - A Ballistic Pendulum. A 12.0-g rifle bullet is...Ch. 8 - Combining Conservation Laws. A 15.0-kg block is...Ch. 8 - CP A 0.800-kg ornament is hanging by a 1.50-m wire...Ch. 8 - A 0.150-kg glider is moving to the right with a...Ch. 8 - Blocks A (mass 2.00 kg) and B (mass 6.00 kg) move...Ch. 8 - A 10.0-g marble slides to the left at a speed of...Ch. 8 - Moderators. Canadian nuclear reactors use heavy...Ch. 8 - You are at the controls of a particle accelerator,...Ch. 8 - Three odd-shaped blocks of chocolate have the...Ch. 8 - Prob. 8.52ECh. 8 - Pluto and Charon. Plutos diameter is approximately...Ch. 8 - A 1200-kg SUV is moving along a straight highway...Ch. 8 - Prob. 8.55ECh. 8 - At one instant, the center of mass of a system of...Ch. 8 - In Example 8.14 (Section 8.5), Ramon pulls on the...Ch. 8 - CALC A system consists of two particles. At t = 0...Ch. 8 - CALC A radio-controlled model airplane has a...Ch. 8 - Prob. 8.60ECh. 8 - A 70-kg astronaut floating in space in a 110-kg...Ch. 8 - A small rocket burns 0.0500 kg of fuel per second,...Ch. 8 - Obviously, we can make rockets to go very fast,...Ch. 8 - A steel ball with mass 40.0 g is dropped from a...Ch. 8 - Just before it is struck by a racket, a tennis...Ch. 8 - Three identical pucks on a horizontal air table...Ch. 8 - Blocks A (mass 2.00 kg) and B (mass 10.00 kg, to...Ch. 8 - A railroad handcar is moving along straight,...Ch. 8 - Spheres A (mass 0.020 kg), B (mass 0.030 kg), and...Ch. 8 - You and your friends are doing physics experiments...Ch. 8 - CP An 8.00-kg block of wood sits at the edge of a...Ch. 8 - CP A small wooden block with mass 0.800 kg is...Ch. 8 - Combining Conservation Laws. A 5.00-kg chunk of...Ch. 8 - CP Block B (mass 4.00 kg) is at rest at the edge...Ch. 8 - Two blocks have a spring compressed between them,...Ch. 8 - Automobile Accident Analysis. You are called as an...Ch. 8 - Accident Analysis. A 1500-kg sedan goes through a...Ch. 8 - CP A 0.150-kg frame, when suspended from a coil...Ch. 8 - A rifle bullet with mass 8.00 g strikes and embeds...Ch. 8 - A Ricocheting Bullet. A 0.100-kg stone rests on a...Ch. 8 - Prob. 8.81PCh. 8 - Prob. 8.82PCh. 8 - A ball with mass M, moving horizontally at 4.00...Ch. 8 - PA 20.00-kg lead sphere is hanging from a hook by...Ch. 8 - A 4.00-g bullet, traveling horizontally with a...Ch. 8 - A 5.00-g bullet is shot through a 1.00-kg wood...Ch. 8 - CP In a shipping company distribution center, an...Ch. 8 - Neutron Decay. A neutron at rest decays (breaks...Ch. 8 - Antineutrino. In beta decay, a nucleus emits an...Ch. 8 - Jonathan and Jane are sitting in a sleigh that is...Ch. 8 - Friends Burt and Ernie stand at opposite ends of a...Ch. 8 - A 45.0-kg woman stands up in a 60.0-kg canoe 5.00...Ch. 8 - You are standing on a concrete slab that in turn...Ch. 8 - CP In a fireworks display, a rocket is launched...Ch. 8 - A 7.0-kg shell at rest explodes into two...Ch. 8 - CP A 20.0-kg projectile is fired at an angle of...Ch. 8 - CP A fireworks rocket is fired vertically upward....Ch. 8 - A 12.0-kg shell is launched at an angle of 55.0...Ch. 8 - CP An outlaw cuts loose a wagon with two boxes of...Ch. 8 - DATA A 2004 Prius with a 150-lb driver and no...Ch. 8 - DATA In your job in a police lab, you must design...Ch. 8 - DATA For the Texas Department of Public Safety,...Ch. 8 - CALC A Variable-Mass Raindrop. In a...Ch. 8 - Prob. 8.104CPCh. 8 - CALC Use the methods of Challenge Problem 8.104 to...Ch. 8 - BIO MOMENTUM AND THE ARCHERFISH. Archerfish are...Ch. 8 - BIO MOMENTUM AND THE ARCHERFISH. Archerfish are...Ch. 8 - BIO MOMENTUM AND THE ARCHERFISH. Archerfish are...Ch. 8 - BIO MOMENTUM AND THE ARCHERFISH. Archerfish are...
Knowledge Booster
Similar questions
- A skateboarder with his board can be modeled as a particle of mass 76.0 kg, located at his center of mass (which we will study in Chapter 9). As shown in Figure P8.49, the skateboarder starts from rest in a crouch-ing position at one lip of a half-pipe (point ). The half-pipe is one half of a cylinder of radius 6.80 m with its axis horizontal. On his descent, the skateboarder moves without friction so that his center of mass moves through one quarter of a circle of radius 630 m. (a) Find his speed at the bottom of the half-pipe (point (b) Immediately after passing point he stands up and raises his arms, lifting his center of mass from 0.500 in to 0.950 m above the concrete (point ). Next, the skateboarder glides upward with his center of mass moving in a quarter circle of radius 5.85 m. His body is horizontal when he passes point , the far lip of the half-pipe. As he passes through point , the speed of the skateboarder is 5.14 m/s. How much chemical potential energy in the body of the skateboarder was converted to mechanical energy in the skateboarderEarth system when he stood up at point ? (c) How high above point does he rise? Caution: Do not try this stunt yourself without the required skill and protective equipment. Figure P8.49arrow_forwardA solid sphere of radius 10 cm is allowed to rotate freely about an axis. The sphere is given a sharp blow so that its center of mass starts from the position shown in the following figure with speed 15 cm/s. What is the maximum angle that the diameter makes with the vertical?arrow_forwardTwo bumper cars at the county fair are sliding toward one another (Fig. P11.54). Initially, bumper car 1 is traveling to the east at 5.62 m/s, and bumper car 2 is traveling 60.0 south of west at 10.00 m/s. They collide and stick together, as the driver of one car reaches out and grabs hold of the other driver. The two bumper cars move off together after the collision, and friction is negligible between the cars and the ground. a. If the masses of bumper cars 1 and 2 are 596 kg and 625 kg respectively, what is the velocity of the bumper cars immediately after the collision? b. What is the kinetic energy lost in the collision? c. Compare your answers to part (b) from this and Problem 54. Is one answer larger than the other? Discuss and explain any differences you find.arrow_forward
- A wad of sticky clay with mass m and velocity vi is fired at a solid cylinder of mass M and radius R (Fig. P11.29). The cylinder is initially at rest and is mounted on a fixed horizontal axle that runs through its center of mass. The line of motion of the projectile is perpendicular to the axle and at a distance d R from the center. (a) Find the angular speed of the system just after the clay strikes and sticks to the surface of the cylinder. (b) Is the mechanical energy of the claycylinder system constant in this process? Explain your answer. (c) Is the momentum of the claycylinder system constant in this process? Explain your answer. Figure P11.29arrow_forwardA bullet of mass m is fired into a ballistic pendulum and embeds itself in the wooden bob of mass M (Fig. P11.33). After the collision, the pendulum reaches a maximum height h above its original position. a. Show that the kinetic energy of the system decreases by the factor m/(m + M) immediately after the collision. b. What is the change in momentum of the bullet-bob system due to the collision? FIGURE P11.33arrow_forwardA pendulum consists of a wooden bob of mass M suspended by a massless rod of length . A bullet of mass mM is fired horizontally with speed v at the bob and emerges from the bob with speed v/3 as shown in Figure P11.72. If the pendulum bob just barely reaches the highest point such that it is able to swing through one complete circle, find an expression for the speed v of the bullet before the collision. FIGURE P11.72arrow_forward
- A ball of mass 50.0 g is dropped from a height of 10.0 m. It rebounds after losing 75% of its kinetic energy during the collision process. If the collision with the ground took 0.010 s, find the magnitude of the impulse experienced by the ball.arrow_forwardA wooden block of mass M resting on a frictionless, horizontal surface is attached to a rigid rod of length and of negligible mass (Fig. P11.27). The rod is pivoted at the other end. A bullet of mass m traveling parallel to the horizontal surface and perpendicular to the rod with speed v hits the block and becomes embedded in it. (a) What is the angular momentum of the bulletblock system about a vertical axis through the pivot? (b) What fraction of the original kinetic energy of the bullet is converted into internal energy in the system during the collision? Figure P11.27arrow_forwardTwo skateboarders, with masses m1 = 75.0 kg and m2 = 65.0 kg, simultaneously leave the opposite sides of a frictionless half-pipe at height h = 4.00 m as shown in Figure P11.49. Assume the skateboarders undergo a completely elastic head-on collision on the horizontal segment of the half-pipe. Treating the skateboarders as particles and assuming they dont fall off their skateboards, what is the height reached by each skateboarder after the collision? FIGURE P11.49arrow_forward
- A long, thin rod of mass m = 5.00 kg and length = 1.20 m rotates around an axis perpendicular to the rod with an angularspeed of 3.00 rad/s. a. What is the angular momentum of therod if the axis passes through the rods midpoint? b. What is theangular momentum of the rod if the axis passes through a pointhalfway between its midpoint and its end?arrow_forwardA propeller consists of two blades each 3.0 m in length and mass 120 kg each. The propeller can be approximated by a single rod rotating about its center of mass. The propeller starts from rest and rotates up to 1200 rpm in 30 seconds at a constant rate. (a) What is the angular momentum of the propeller at t=10s ; t=20s ? (b) What is the torque on the propeller?arrow_forwardA small block of mass m1 = 0.500 kg is released from rest at the top of a frictionless, curve-shaped wedge of mass m2 = 3.00 kg, which sits on a frictionless, horizontal surface as shown in Figure P8.55a. When the block leaves the wedge, its velocity is measured to be 4.00 m/s to the right as shown in Figure P8.55b. (a) What is the velocity of the wedge after the block reaches the horizontal surface? (b) What is the height h of the wedge?arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern ...PhysicsISBN:9781337553292Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningPrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningUniversity Physics Volume 1PhysicsISBN:9781938168277Author:William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff SannyPublisher:OpenStax - Rice University
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology ...PhysicsISBN:9781305116399Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage LearningGlencoe Physics: Principles and Problems, Student...PhysicsISBN:9780078807213Author:Paul W. ZitzewitzPublisher:Glencoe/McGraw-Hill
Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern ...
Physics
ISBN:9781337553292
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
University Physics Volume 1
Physics
ISBN:9781938168277
Author:William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff Sanny
Publisher:OpenStax - Rice University
Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology ...
Physics
ISBN:9781305116399
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...
Physics
ISBN:9781133939146
Author:Katz, Debora M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Glencoe Physics: Principles and Problems, Student...
Physics
ISBN:9780078807213
Author:Paul W. Zitzewitz
Publisher:Glencoe/McGraw-Hill