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
Textbook Question
Chapter 5, Problem 5.39E
CP As shown in Fig. E5.34, block A (mass 2.25 kg) rests on a tabletop. It is connected by a horizontal cord passing over a light, frictionless pulley to a hanging block B (mass 1.30 kg). The coefficient of kinetic friction between block A and the tabletop is 0.450. The blocks are released then from rest. Draw one or more free-body diagrams to find (a) the speed of each block after they move 3.00 cm and (b) the tension in the cord.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
In the sport of curling, players slide a 20.0 kg granite stone down a 38.0 m long
ice rink. The coefficient of kinetic friction of the stone on ice is 0.0168.
Calculate the initial speed of the stone, if it comes to rest after travelling 38.0 m,
assuming that it travelled in a straight line and does not rotate while sliding.
O 4.38 m/s
O 6.02 m/s
3.58 m/s
O 342 m/s
Express answers in significant figures and scientific notation only.
An athlete slides down from rest 40.0 meter along an icy hill which is 35 degrees from the horizontal. He then continues sliding on the level ice.
a) If the coefficient of kinetic friction between the athlete and ice is 0.20 (neglect air resistance) find speed (m/s) of the athlete at the foot of the plane.
b) find the distance (m) from the foot of the plane to the point where he has landed to the level ice
David throws a 50 kg cart down a ramp with an initial speed of vi = 6 m/s. The ramp is at an angle of 20◦, and the coefficient of kinetic friction between the cart and the ramp is µk = 0.25. Additionally, the coefficient of static friction is µs = 0.55. How much time does it take to reach Ryan who is 10 m away? Assume that the cart slides and doesn’t roll.
Chapter 5 Solutions
University Physics with Modern Physics (14th Edition)
Ch. 5.1 - A traffic light of weight w hangs from two...Ch. 5.2 - Suppose you hold the glider in Example 5.12 so...Ch. 5.3 - Consider a box that is placed on different...Ch. 5.4 - Satellites are held in orbit by the force of our...Ch. 5 - A man sits in a seat that is hanging from a rope....Ch. 5 - In general, the normal force is not equal to the...Ch. 5 - A clothesline hangs between two poles. No matter...Ch. 5 - You drive a car up a steep hill at constant speed....Ch. 5 - For medical reasons, astronauts in outer space...Ch. 5 - To push a box up a ramp, which requires less...
Ch. 5 - A woman in an elevator lets go of her briefcase,...Ch. 5 - A block rests on an inclined plane with enough...Ch. 5 - A crate slides up an inclined ramp and then slides...Ch. 5 - A crate of books rests on a level floor. To move...Ch. 5 - In a world without friction, which of the...Ch. 5 - When you stand with bare feet in a wet bathtub,...Ch. 5 - You are pushing a large crate from the back of a...Ch. 5 - It is often said that friction always opposes...Ch. 5 - If there is a net force on a particle in uniform...Ch. 5 - A curve in a road has a bank angle calculated and...Ch. 5 - You swing a ball on the end of a lightweight...Ch. 5 - The centrifugal force is not included in the...Ch. 5 - A professor swings a rubber stopper in a...Ch. 5 - To keep the forces on the riders within allowable...Ch. 5 - A tennis ball drops from rest at the top of a tall...Ch. 5 - You throw a baseball straight upward with speed 0....Ch. 5 - You throw a baseball straight upward. If you do...Ch. 5 - You have two identical tennis balls and fill one...Ch. 5 - A ball is dropped from rest and feels air...Ch. 5 - A ball is dropped from rest and feels air...Ch. 5 - When a balled baseball moves with air drag, when...Ch. 5 - A ball is thrown from the edge of a high cliff....Ch. 5 - Two 25.0-N weights are suspended at opposite ends...Ch. 5 - In Fig. E5.2 each of the suspended blocks has...Ch. 5 - A 75.0-kg wrecking ball hangs from a uniform,...Ch. 5 - BIO Injuries to the Spinal Column. In the...Ch. 5 - A picture frame hung against a wall is suspended...Ch. 5 - A large wrecking ball is held in place by two...Ch. 5 - Find the tension in each cord in Fig. E5.7 if the...Ch. 5 - A 1130-kg car is held in place by a light cable on...Ch. 5 - A man pushes on a piano with mass 180 kg; it...Ch. 5 - In Fig. E5.10 the weight w is 60.0 N. (a) What is...Ch. 5 - BIO Stay Awake! An astronaut is inside a 2.25 106...Ch. 5 - A rocket of initial mass 125 kg (including all the...Ch. 5 - CP Genesis Crash. On September 8, 2004, the...Ch. 5 - Three sleds are being pulled horizontally on...Ch. 5 - Atwoods Machine. A 15.0-kg load of bricks hangs...Ch. 5 - CP An 8.00-Kg block of ice, released from rest at...Ch. 5 - A light rope is attached to a block with mass 4.00...Ch. 5 - CP Runway Design. A transport plane lakes off from...Ch. 5 - CP A 750.0-kg boulder is raised from a quarry 125...Ch. 5 - Apparent Weight. A 550-N physics student stands on...Ch. 5 - CP BIO Force During a Jump. When jumping straight...Ch. 5 - CP CALC A 2540-kg test rocket is launched...Ch. 5 - CP CALC A 2.00-kg box is moving to the right with...Ch. 5 - CP CALC A 5.00-kg crate is suspended from the end...Ch. 5 - BIO The Trendelenburg Position. After emergencies...Ch. 5 - In a laboratory experiment on friction, a 135-N...Ch. 5 - CP A stockroom worker pushes a box with mass 16.8...Ch. 5 - A box of bananas weighing 40.0 N rests on a...Ch. 5 - A 45.0-kg crate of tools rests on a horizontal...Ch. 5 - Some sliding rocks approach the base of a hill...Ch. 5 - A box with mass 10.0 kg moves on a ramp that is...Ch. 5 - A pickup truck is carrying a toolbox, but the rear...Ch. 5 - You are lowering two boxes, one on top of the...Ch. 5 - Consider the system shown in Fig. E5.34. Block A...Ch. 5 - CP Stopping Distance. (a) If the coefficient of...Ch. 5 - CP A 25.0-kg box of textbooks rests on a loading...Ch. 5 - Two crates connected by a rope lie on a horizontal...Ch. 5 - A box with mass m is dragged across a level floor...Ch. 5 - CP As shown in Fig. E5.34, block A (mass 2.25 kg)...Ch. 5 - You throw a baseball straight upward. The drag...Ch. 5 - A large crate with mass m rests on a horizontal...Ch. 5 - (a) In Example 5.18 (Section 5.3), what value of D...Ch. 5 - A stone with mass 0.80 kg is attached to one end...Ch. 5 - BIO Force on a Skaters Wrist. A 52-kg ice skater...Ch. 5 - A small remote-controlled car with mass 1.60 kg...Ch. 5 - 5.46A small car with mass 0.800 kg travels at...Ch. 5 - A small model car with mass m travels at constant...Ch. 5 - A flat (unbanked) curve on a highway has a radius...Ch. 5 - A 1125-kg car and a 2250-kg pickup truck approach...Ch. 5 - The Giant Swing at a county fair consists of a...Ch. 5 - In another version of the Giant Swing (see...Ch. 5 - A small button placed on a horizontal rotating...Ch. 5 - Rotating Space Stations. One problem for humans...Ch. 5 - The Cosmo Clock 21 Ferris wheel in Yokohama,...Ch. 5 - An airplane flies in a loop (a circular path in a...Ch. 5 - A 50.0-kg stunt pilot who has been diving her...Ch. 5 - Stay Dry! You tie a cord to a pail of water and...Ch. 5 - A bowling ball weighing 71.2 N (16.0 lb) is...Ch. 5 - BIO Effect on Blood of Walking. While a person is...Ch. 5 - An adventurous archaeologist crosses between two...Ch. 5 - Two ropes are connected to a steel cable that...Ch. 5 - In Fig. P5.62 a worker lifts a weight w by pulling...Ch. 5 - In a repair shop a truck engine that has mass 409...Ch. 5 - A horizontal wire holds a solid uniform ball of...Ch. 5 - A solid uniform 45.0-kg ball of diameter 32.0 cm...Ch. 5 - CP A box is sliding with a constant speed of 4.00...Ch. 5 - CP BIO Forces During Chin-ups. When you do a...Ch. 5 - CP CALC A 2.00-kg box is suspended from the end of...Ch. 5 - CALC A 3.00-kg box that is several hundred meters...Ch. 5 - CP A 5.00-kg box sits at rest at the bottom of a...Ch. 5 - Two boxes connected by a light horizontal rope are...Ch. 5 - A 6.00-kg box sits on a ramp that is inclined at...Ch. 5 - CP An 8.00-kg box sits on a ramp that is inclined...Ch. 5 - CP In Fig. P5.74, m1 = 20.0 kg and = 53.1. The...Ch. 5 - CP You place a book of mass 5.00 kg against a...Ch. 5 - Block A in Fig. P5.76 weighs 60.0 N. The...Ch. 5 - A block with mass m1 is placed on an inclined...Ch. 5 - BIO The Flying Leap of a Flea. High-speed motion...Ch. 5 - Block A in Fig. P5.79 weighs 1.20 N, and block B...Ch. 5 - CP Elevator Design. You are designing an elevator...Ch. 5 - CP CALC You are standing on a bathroom scale in an...Ch. 5 - A hammer is hanging by a light rope from the...Ch. 5 - A 40.0-kg packing case is initially at rest on the...Ch. 5 - If the coefficient of static friction between a...Ch. 5 - Two identical 15.0-kg balls, each 25.0 cm in...Ch. 5 - CP Traffic Court. You are called as an expert...Ch. 5 - Block A in Fig. P5.87 weighs 1.90 N, and block B...Ch. 5 - CP Losing Cargo. A 12.0-kg box rests on the level...Ch. 5 - Block A in Fig. P5.89 has mass 4.00 kg, and block...Ch. 5 - Two blocks connected by a cord passing over a...Ch. 5 - In terms of m1, m2, and g, find the acceleration...Ch. 5 - Block B, with mass 5.00 kg, rests on block A, with...Ch. 5 - Two objects, with masses 5.00 kg and 2.00 kg, hang...Ch. 5 - Friction in an Elevator. You are riding in an...Ch. 5 - A block is placed against the vertical front of a...Ch. 5 - Two blocks, with masses 4.00 kg and 8.00 kg, are...Ch. 5 - Block A, with weight 3w, slides down an inclined...Ch. 5 - Jack sits in the chair of a Ferris wheel that is...Ch. 5 - Bunked Curve I. A curve with a 120-m radius on a...Ch. 5 - Banked Curve II. Consider a wet roadway banked as...Ch. 5 - Blocks A, B, and C are placed as in Fig. P5.101...Ch. 5 - You are riding in a school bus. As the bus rounds...Ch. 5 - CALC You throw a rock downward into water with a...Ch. 5 - A 4.00-kg block is attached to a vertical rod by...Ch. 5 - On the ride Spindletop at the amusement park Six...Ch. 5 - A 70-kg person rides in a 30-kg cart moving at 12...Ch. 5 - A small bead can slide without friction on a...Ch. 5 - A physics major is working to pay her college...Ch. 5 - DATA In your physics lab, a block of mass m is at...Ch. 5 - DATA A road heading due cast passes over a small...Ch. 5 - DATA You are an engineer working for a...Ch. 5 - Moving Wedge. A wedge with mass M rests on a...Ch. 5 - Figure P5.112 5.113A wedge with mass M rests on a...Ch. 5 - Double Atwoods Machine. In Fig. P5.114 masses m1...Ch. 5 - A ball is held at rest at position A in Fig....Ch. 5 - FRICTION AND CLIMBING SHOES. Shoes made for the...Ch. 5 - FRICTION AND CLIMBING SHOES. Shoes made for the...Ch. 5 - FRICTION AND CLIMBING SHOES. Shoes made for the...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
30. A 3000-rn-high mountain is located on the equator. How much faster does a climber on top of the mountain mo...
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: A Strategic Approach with Modern Physics (4th Edition)
The enthalpy of combustion of a gallon (3.8 liters) of gasoline is about 31,000 kcal. The enthalpy of combustio...
An Introduction to Thermal Physics
Explain all answers clearly, with complete sentences and proper essay structure if needed. An asterisk (*) desi...
Cosmic Perspective Fundamentals
Genetic Engineering and Future Evolution. For billions of years, evolution has proceeded through mutations and ...
Life in the Universe (4th Edition)
The weight of satellite on the surface of earth.
Physics (5th Edition)
4.(I) What is the mass of the diver in Fig. 9-49 if she exerts a torque of 1800m. N on the board, relative the ...
Physics: Principles with Applications
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
- Let us make the (unrealistic) assumption that a boat of mass m gliding with initial velocity v0 in water is slowed by a viscous retarding force of magnitude bv2, where b is a constant, (a) Find and sketch v(t). How long does it take the boat to reach a speed of v0/l000? (b) Find x(t). How far does the boat travel in this time? Let m = 200 kg, v0 = 2 m/s, and b = 0.2 Nm-2s2.arrow_forwardA box of mass 4.0 kg hangs by a cable from the ceiling of an elevator. The elevator is moving up at a steady speed of 5.0 m/s for 8.0 m. Use g = 10 m/s2. Consider the system is the box and the Earth. Which of the following is considered the external force? Select all apply.arrow_forwardAn 8.00 kg box sits on a ramp that is inclined at 33.0 above the horizontal. The coefficient of kinetic friction between the box and the surface of the ramp is mk = 0.300. A constant horizontal force F = 26.0 N is applied to the box, and the box moves down the ramp. If the box is initially at rest, what is its speed 2.00 s after the force is applied?arrow_forward
- A 0.30 kg puck is being pushed across a table with a horizontal force of 2.0 N. It starts from rest and is pushed for 13 seconds, ending with a speed of 1 m/s. Calculate the coefficient of friction μk between the puck and the table.arrow_forwardA person pushes a box of mass m= 25 kg in a straight line along a rough floor. The applied force F has magnitude 85 N and acts downward at an angle 0 = 10° with respect to the horizontal, as shown below. The box is initially at rest at the position x, = 0 m, and it has speed v2 = 0.55 m/s at position x2= 3.50 m. a). Find the coefficient of friction between the box and the floor. b). What is the net work done? c). How much work (magnitude and sign) is done by the friction force? (This problem involves constant acceleration, Newton's Laws, and work!) marrow_forwardA person catches a ball with a mass of 145 g dropped from a height of 60.0 m above his glove. His hand stops the ball in 0.0100 s. What is the force exerted by his glove on the ball? Assume the ball slows down with constant acceleration.arrow_forward
- A waitress shoves a ketchup bottle with mass 0.45 kg to her right along a smooth, level lunch counter. The bottle leaves her hand moving at 2.8 m/s, then slows down as it slides because of a constant horizontal friction force exerted on it by the countertop. It slides for 1.0 m before coming to rest. What is the magnitude of the friction force acting on the bottle?arrow_forwardQuestion #1: A unicorn running on a beach at 7 m/s changes speed at a constant rate of 3.6 m/s2 over a period of 3 seconds. What distance did the unicorn travel during this process? Question #2: 60-kg woman in an elevator is accelerating downward at a rate of 1.2 m/s2. What is the magnitude of the force exerted by the elevator floor on the woman's feet? Question #3: Two people play tug of war. The 100-kg person on the left pulls with 1,200 N, and the 70-kg person on the right pulls with 800 N. Assume that neither person releases their grip on the rope with either hand at any time, assume that the rope is always taut, and assume that the rope does not stretch. What is the magnitude of the tension in the rope in Newtons? Question #4: A man pulls a 14-kg sled 44 meters along an angled hill with a force of 95 N, which elevates the man 30 meters above the bottom of the hill. The man then hops on his sled and slides to the bottom of the hill back along his 44 meter path, during which a 296 N…arrow_forwardChapter 05, Problem 010 GO A 0.180 kg particle moves along an x axis according to x(t) = - 14.0 + 2.00 t + 4.00 2- 5.00 t, with x in meters and t in seconds. In unit-vector notation, what is the net force acting on the particle at t = 3.30 s ? Give an expression for the (a) x, (b) y and (c) z components. (a) Number Units (b) Number Units (c) Number Units Click if you would like to Show Work for this question: Open Show Work Question Attempts: Unlimited SAVE FOR LATER SUBMIT ANSWER powered by MapleNet ere to search 1:51 PM ENG 4/4/2021 ASUS 19home prt sc pause break delete f10 end f1Pgup f12Pgdn insert & 21 4. 8 backspo-arrow_forward
- A cart with mass 15.0 kg moves in a straight line on a frictionless horizontal surface. Take this surface to be along the x-axis. The cart has an initial speed of 8.00 m/s and it was pushed 5.00 m in the same direction as the initial velocity by an external force with a magnitude of 20.0 N. What is the cart's final speed?arrow_forwardIn the figure, block A has a mass of 4.00 kg. It rests on a smooth horizontal table and is connected by a very light horizontal string over an ideal pulley to block B, which has a mass of 3.5 kg. When block B is gently released from rest, how long does it take block B to travel 90 cm? B. O 0.404 s 0.785 s 0.494 s O 0.62 s O 0.935 s A.arrow_forwardInitially block A has a speed of 3 m/s as shown. Determine the speed of block B at t=6s. The coefficient of kinetic friction between block A and the surface is 0.15 while the static friction is 0.14. The pulleys are weightless and frictionless. V4.1 = 3 m/s 10 kg A 30° B 20 kgarrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Glencoe Physics: Principles and Problems, Student...PhysicsISBN:9780078807213Author:Paul W. ZitzewitzPublisher:Glencoe/McGraw-HillPrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningClassical Dynamics of Particles and SystemsPhysicsISBN:9780534408961Author:Stephen T. Thornton, Jerry B. MarionPublisher:Cengage Learning
Glencoe Physics: Principles and Problems, Student...
Physics
ISBN:9780078807213
Author:Paul W. Zitzewitz
Publisher:Glencoe/McGraw-Hill
Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Classical Dynamics of Particles and Systems
Physics
ISBN:9780534408961
Author:Stephen T. Thornton, Jerry B. Marion
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Drawing Free-Body Diagrams With Examples; Author: The Physics Classroom;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3rZR7FSSidc;License: Standard Youtube License