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
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 2, Problem 2.42E
A brick is dropped (zero initial speed) from the roof of a building. The brick strikes the ground in 1.90 s. You may ignore air resistance, so the brick is in free fall. (a) How tall, in meters, is the building? (b) What is the magnitude of the brick’s velocity just before it reaches the ground? (c) Sketch ay−t, υy−t, and y−t graphs for the motion of the brick.
Expert Solution & Answer
Trending nowThis is a popular solution!
Learn your wayIncludes step-by-step video
schedule05:40
Students have asked these similar questions
A helicopter is ascending vertically with a speed of 5.30 m/s. At a height of 107 m above the Earth, a package is dropped from the helicopter.
How much time does it take for the package to reach the ground? [Hint: What is v0 for the package?]
Express your answer to three significant figures and include the appropriate units.
My Answer is that t= 4.163 but what unit is it?
I tried s, m/s, min but none of them were correct. PLEASE HELP CONFIRM MY ANSWER and THE UNIT along with 4.163
The vertical displacement (in m) of a plane is 1.5 t2 up; t is the time (in s) after takeoff. The plane releases a package 2.0 s after takeoff.
What is the magnitude of the velocity (in m/s) when the packaged is released? Report your answer in the appropriate number of significant digits.
Answer value
Problem 2: An object is thrown from the top of a building that is 16.4 m high. The object is thrown with a
velocity of 7.3 m/s.
Part (a) How high above the ground does the object go?
Numeric : A numeric value is expected and not an expression.
h =
Part (b) How long is it in the air in seconds?
Numeric : A numeric value is expected and not an expression.
t =
Part (c) What is the velocity of the object in m/s after 0.5 s?
Numeric : A numeric value is expected and not an expression.
v =
Part (d) What is the velocity of the object in m/s after 1.5 s?
Numeric : Anumeric value is expected and not an expression.
V =
Part (e) What is the velocity of the object in m/s when it reaches the bottom?
Numeric : A numeric value is expected and not an expression.
V =
Chapter 2 Solutions
University Physics with Modern Physics (14th Edition)
Ch. 2.1 - Each of the following five trips takes one hour....Ch. 2.2 - TEST YOUR UNDERSTANDING OF SECTION 2.2 Figure 2.9...Ch. 2.3 - Look again at the x-t graph in Fig. 2.9 at the end...Ch. 2.4 - Four possible vx-t graphs are shown for the two...Ch. 2.5 - If you toss a ball upward with a certain initial...Ch. 2 - Does the speedometer of a car measure speed or...Ch. 2 - The black dots at the top of Fig. Q2.2 represent a...Ch. 2 - Can an object with constant acceleration reverse...Ch. 2 - Under what conditions is average velocity equal to...Ch. 2 - Is it possible for an object to be (a) slowing...
Ch. 2 - Under what conditions does the magnitude of the...Ch. 2 - When a Dodge Viper is at Elwoods Car Wash, a BMW...Ch. 2 - A driver in Massachusetts was sent to traffic...Ch. 2 - Can you have zero displacement and nonzero average...Ch. 2 - Can you have zero acceleration and nonzero...Ch. 2 - Can you have zero velocity and nonzero average...Ch. 2 - An automobile is traveling west. Can it have a...Ch. 2 - The officials truck in Fig. 2.2 is at x1 = 277 m...Ch. 2 - Under constant acceleration the average velocity...Ch. 2 - You throw a baseball straight up in the air so...Ch. 2 - Prove these statements: (a) As long as you can...Ch. 2 - A dripping water faucet steadily releases drops...Ch. 2 - If you know the initial position and initial...Ch. 2 - From the top of a tall building, you throw one...Ch. 2 - You run due cast at a constant speed of 3.00 m/s...Ch. 2 - An object is thrown straight up into the air and...Ch. 2 - When you drop an object from a certain height, it...Ch. 2 - A car travels in the +x-direction on a straight...Ch. 2 - In an experiment, a shearwater (a seabird) was...Ch. 2 - Trip Home. You normally drive on the freeway...Ch. 2 - From Pillar to Post. Starting from a pillar, you...Ch. 2 - Starting from the front door of a ranch house, you...Ch. 2 - A Honda Civic travels in a straight line along a...Ch. 2 - CALC A car is stopped at a traffic light. It then...Ch. 2 - CALC A bird is flying due east. Its distance from...Ch. 2 - A ball moves in a straight line (the x-axis). The...Ch. 2 - A physics professor leaves her house and walks...Ch. 2 - A test car travels in a straight line along the...Ch. 2 - Figure E2.12 shows the velocity of a solar-powered...Ch. 2 - The Fastest (and Most Expensive) Car! The table...Ch. 2 - CALC A race car starts from rest and travels east...Ch. 2 - CALC A turtle crawls along a straight line, which...Ch. 2 - An astronaut has left the International Space...Ch. 2 - CALC A cars velocity as a function of time is...Ch. 2 - CALC The position of the front bumper of a test...Ch. 2 - An antelope moving with constant acceleration...Ch. 2 - BIO Blackout? A jet fighter pilot wishes to...Ch. 2 - A Fast Pitch. The fastest measured pitched...Ch. 2 - A Tennis Serve. In the fastest measured tennis...Ch. 2 - BIO Automobile Air Bags. The human body can...Ch. 2 - BIO A pilot who accelerates at more than 4g begins...Ch. 2 - BIO Air-Bag Injuries. During an auto accident, the...Ch. 2 - BIO Prevention of Hip Fractures. Falls resulting...Ch. 2 - BIO Are We Martians? It has been suggested, and...Ch. 2 - Entering the Freeway. A car sits on an entrance...Ch. 2 - At launch a rocket ship weighs 4.5 million pounds....Ch. 2 - A cat walks in a straight line, which we shall...Ch. 2 - The graph in Fig. E2.31 shows the velocity of a...Ch. 2 - Two cars, A and B, move along the x-axis. Figure...Ch. 2 - A small block has constant acceleration as it...Ch. 2 - At the instant the traffic light turns green, a...Ch. 2 - (a) If a flea can jump straight up to a height of...Ch. 2 - A small rock is thrown vertically upward with a...Ch. 2 - A juggler throws a bowling pin straight up with an...Ch. 2 - You throw a glob of putty straight up toward the...Ch. 2 - A tennis ball on Mars, where the acceleration due...Ch. 2 - Touchdown on the Moon. A lunar lander is making...Ch. 2 - A Simple Reaction-Time Test. A meter stick is held...Ch. 2 - A brick is dropped (zero initial speed) from the...Ch. 2 - Launch Failure. A 7500-kg rocket blasts off...Ch. 2 - A hot-air balloonist, rising vertically with a...Ch. 2 - BIO The rocket-driven sled Sonic Wind No. 2, used...Ch. 2 - An egg is thrown nearly vertically upward from a...Ch. 2 - A 15-kg rock is dropped from rest on the earth and...Ch. 2 - A large boulder is ejected vertically upward from...Ch. 2 - You throw a small rock straight up front the edge...Ch. 2 - CALC A small object moves along the x-axis with...Ch. 2 - CALC A rocket starts from rest and moves upward...Ch. 2 - CALC The acceleration of a bus is given by ax(t) =...Ch. 2 - CALC The acceleration of a motorcycle is given by...Ch. 2 - BIO Flying Leap of the Flea. High-speed motion...Ch. 2 - BIO A typical male sprinter can maintain his...Ch. 2 - CALC A lunar lander is descending toward the moons...Ch. 2 - Earthquake Analysis. Earthquakes produce several...Ch. 2 - A brick is dropped from the roof of a tall...Ch. 2 - A rocket carrying a satellite is accelerating...Ch. 2 - A subway train starts from rest at a station and...Ch. 2 - A gazelle is running in a straight line (the...Ch. 2 - Collision. The engineer of a passenger train...Ch. 2 - A ball starts from rest and rolls down a hill with...Ch. 2 - Two cars start 200 m apart and drive toward each...Ch. 2 - A car and a truck start from rest at the same...Ch. 2 - You are standing at rest at a bus stop. A bus...Ch. 2 - Passing. The driver of a car wishes to pass a...Ch. 2 - CALC An objects velocity is measured to be vx(t) =...Ch. 2 - CALC The acceleration of a particle is given by...Ch. 2 - Egg Drop. You are on the roof of the physics...Ch. 2 - A certain volcano on earth can eject rocks...Ch. 2 - An entertainer juggles balls while doing other...Ch. 2 - Look Out Below. Sam heaves a 16-lb shot straight...Ch. 2 - A flowerpot falls off a windowsill and passes the...Ch. 2 - Two stones are thrown vertically upward from the...Ch. 2 - A Multistage Rocket. In the first stage of a...Ch. 2 - During your summer internship for an aerospace...Ch. 2 - A physics teacher performing an outdoor...Ch. 2 - A helicopter carrying Dr. Evil takes off with a...Ch. 2 - Cliff Height. You are climbing in the High Sierra...Ch. 2 - CALC An object is moving along the x-axis. At t =...Ch. 2 - A ball is thrown straight up from the ground with...Ch. 2 - CALC Cars A and B travel in a straight line. The...Ch. 2 - DATA In your physics lab you release a small...Ch. 2 - DATA In a physics lab experiment, you release a...Ch. 2 - DATA A model car starts from rest and travels in a...Ch. 2 - In the vertical jump, an athlete starts from a...Ch. 2 - Catching the Bus. A student is running at her top...Ch. 2 - A ball is thrown straight up from the edge of the...Ch. 2 - BIO BLOOD FLOW IN THE HEART. The human circulatory...Ch. 2 - BIO BLOOD FLOW IN THE HEART. The human circulatory...Ch. 2 - BIO BLOOD FLOW IN THE HEART. The human circulatory...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
Point charges q1=50C and q2=25C are placed 1.0 m apart. What is the force on a third charge q3=20C placed midwa...
University Physics Volume 2
The pV-diagram of the Carnot cycle.
Sears And Zemansky's University Physics With Modern Physics
17. A microsecond is one- ________of a second.
Applied Physics (11th Edition)
How much of the entire Moon’s surface is illuminated by the Sun during this phase (circle one)?
None of the sur...
Lecture- Tutorials for Introductory Astronomy
A car engine moves a piston with a circular cross section of 7.5000.002 cm diameter a distance of 3.2500.001 cm...
College Physics
34.35 BIO The Cornea As a Simple Lens. The cornea behaves as a thin lens of focal length approximately 1.8 cm, ...
University Physics (14th Edition)
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- You decide to drop a water balloon on a friend as a horribly inconsiderate prank that they shall never forgive you for. You climb onto an overpass near their favorite bike trail and release the balloon from rest some 7.7 m above the ground. If your friend is riding their bike at 11.4 m/s, how far out must they be from the overpass when you drop it? Assume your result is in m. DO NOT include units with your numerical answer.arrow_forwardThe velocity of a particle is given by v = 23t2 - 110t + 52, where v is in meters per second and t is in seconds. Plot the velocity v and acceleration a versus time for the first 6.4 seconds of motion and evaluate the velocity when a is zero. Make the plots and then answer the questions. Questions: When t = 0.8 s, V = i m/s, a = i m/s2 When t = 3.7 s, V = i m/s, a = i m/s? When t = 4.7 s, V = i m/s, a = i m/s? When a = 0, V = m/sarrow_forwardWe are standing on the top of a 720 feet tall building and launch a small object upward. The object's height, measured in feet, after t seconds is h(t) = - 16t2 +64t+ 720. = A) What is the object initial velocity? B) What is the highest point that the object reaches? ft/second feetarrow_forward
- The figure here shows the speed v versus height y of a ball tossed directly upward, along a y axis. Distance d is 0.37 m. The speed at height yA is vA. The speed at height yB is vA/3. What is speed vA?arrow_forwardx = xót vót tật, ở = To +ất, v = vỏ +2āA,t=i + -b+√b²-4ac 2aarrow_forwardYou attach a meter stick to an oak tree, such that the top of the meter stick is 2.67 meters above the ground. Later, an acorn falls from somewhere higher up in the tree. If the acorn takes 0.311 seconds to pass the length of the meter stick, how high (h0) above the ground in meters was the acorn before it fell, assuming that the acorn did not run into any branches or leaves on the way down?arrow_forward
- A hot air balloon is moving vertically upwards at a constant rate of 9.0 m/s. As the balloon rises, a package is dropped from the balloon and it takes 5 s to hit the ground. How far did the package fall? Make sure to include a diagram of the physical situation, label known and unknown quantities with units, and coordinate system. Thanks!arrow_forwardA swimmer took a running leap off a high-diving platform. The swimmer was running at 2.8 m/s and hit the water 2.6 seconds later. a) How high was the platform, and b) how far from the edge of the platform did the swimmer hit the water? Ignore wind resistance.arrow_forward(a) What are the coordinates of the initial position of the stone? x0 = m y0 = m (b) What are the components of the initial velocity? v0x = m/s v0y = m/s (c) Write the equations for the x- and y-components of the velocity of the stone with time. (Use the following as necessary: t. Let the variable t be measured in seconds. Do not include units in your answer.) vx = vy =arrow_forward
- The displacement of a particle is given by s = 2t³ - 42t² + 120t - 68 where s is in feet and t is in seconds. Plot the displacement, velocity, and acceleration as functions of time for the first 16 seconds of motion. After you have made the plots, answer the questions. Questions: At t = 3.3 sec, S= i ft, v = i ft/sec, a = i ft/sec At t = 8.9 sec, S = ft, v = i ft/sec, a = i ft/sec Att = 14.2 sec, S= i ft, v = i ft/sec, a = i ft/sec The velocity is zero when t = i i sec and when t = i secarrow_forwardA pumpkin is shot straight up with an initial speed of 5.9 m/s. What is the maximum height it can reach, in meters? Use g = 10 m/s2.Your answer needs to have 2 significant figures, including the negative sign in your answer if needed. Do not include the positive sign if the answer is positive. No unit is needed in your answer, it is already given in the question statement.arrow_forwardThe displacement of a particle is given by s = 4t3 - 60t² + 100t - 58 where s is in feet and t is in seconds. Plot the displacement, velocity, and acceleration as functions of time for the first 13 seconds of motion. After you have made the plots, answer the questions. Questions: At t = 1.8 S= i 49.072 ft,v= -77.12 ft/sec, a = -76.8 ft/sec sec, At t = 6.6 S= i 19263.104 ft,v= -169.28 ft/sec, a = 38.4 ft/sec sec, Att = 9.8 S = -1075.632 V = ft/sec,a 115.2 ft/sec sec, The velocity is zero when t = i 217.9795 ft, Mi 10218.304 sec and when t = i 22.0205 secarrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- College PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781305952300Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningUniversity Physics (14th Edition)PhysicsISBN:9780133969290Author:Hugh D. Young, Roger A. FreedmanPublisher:PEARSONIntroduction To Quantum MechanicsPhysicsISBN:9781107189638Author:Griffiths, David J., Schroeter, Darrell F.Publisher:Cambridge University Press
- Physics for Scientists and EngineersPhysicsISBN:9781337553278Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningLecture- Tutorials for Introductory AstronomyPhysicsISBN:9780321820464Author:Edward E. Prather, Tim P. Slater, Jeff P. Adams, Gina BrissendenPublisher:Addison-WesleyCollege Physics: A Strategic Approach (4th Editio...PhysicsISBN:9780134609034Author:Randall D. Knight (Professor Emeritus), Brian Jones, Stuart FieldPublisher:PEARSON
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781305952300
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
University Physics (14th Edition)
Physics
ISBN:9780133969290
Author:Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman
Publisher:PEARSON
Introduction To Quantum Mechanics
Physics
ISBN:9781107189638
Author:Griffiths, David J., Schroeter, Darrell F.
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Physics for Scientists and Engineers
Physics
ISBN:9781337553278
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Lecture- Tutorials for Introductory Astronomy
Physics
ISBN:9780321820464
Author:Edward E. Prather, Tim P. Slater, Jeff P. Adams, Gina Brissenden
Publisher:Addison-Wesley
College Physics: A Strategic Approach (4th Editio...
Physics
ISBN:9780134609034
Author:Randall D. Knight (Professor Emeritus), Brian Jones, Stuart Field
Publisher:PEARSON
Position/Velocity/Acceleration Part 1: Definitions; Author: Professor Dave explains;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4dCrkp8qgLU;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY