Applied Physics (11th Edition)
11th Edition
ISBN: 9780134159386
Author: Dale Ewen, Neill Schurter, Erik Gundersen
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 6, Problem 4RQ
How are impulse and change in momentum related?
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Applied Physics (11th Edition)
Ch. 6.1 - Find the momentum of each object. 1. m = 2.00 kg, ...Ch. 6.1 - Find the momentum of each object. 2. m = 5.00 kg, ...Ch. 6.1 - Find the momentum of each object. 3. m = 17.0...Ch. 6.1 - Find the momentum of each object. 4. m = 38.0 kg, ...Ch. 6.1 - Find the momentum of each object. 5. m = 38 105...Ch. 6.1 - Find the momentum of each object. 6. m = 3.84 kg, ...Ch. 6.1 - Find the momentum of each object. 7. Fw = 1.50 ...Ch. 6.1 - Find the momentum of each object. 8. Fw = 3200 lb,...Ch. 6.1 - a. Find the momentum of a heavy automobile...Ch. 6.1 - a. Find the momentum of a bullet of mass 1.00 103...
Ch. 6.1 - a. Find the momentum of an automobile of mass 2630...Ch. 6.1 - A ball of mass 0.50 kg is thrown straight up at...Ch. 6.1 - A bullet with mass 60.0 g is fired with an initial...Ch. 6.1 - A cannon is mounted on a railroad car. The cannon...Ch. 6.1 - A 125-kg pile driver falls from a height of 10.0 m...Ch. 6.1 - A person is traveling 75.0 km/h in an automobile...Ch. 6.1 - A 75.0-g bullet is fired with a muzzle velocity of...Ch. 6.1 - A 40.0-grain bullet is fired at a muzzle velocity...Ch. 6.1 - a. What force is required to stop a 1250-kg car...Ch. 6.1 - (a) What force is required to slow a 1350-kg car...Ch. 6.1 - What force is required to stop a 3000-kg truck...Ch. 6.1 - What force is needed to stop a piece of heavy...Ch. 6.1 - A standard 5.0-oz baseball is thrown and reaches a...Ch. 6.2 - One ball of mass 0.500 kg traveling 6.00 m/s to...Ch. 6.2 - A ball of mass 625 g traveling 4.00 m/s to the...Ch. 6.2 - A 0.600-kg ball traveling 4.00 m/s to the right...Ch. 6.2 - A 90.0-g disk traveling 3.00 m/s to the right...Ch. 6.2 - A 98.0-kg parts cart with rubber bumpers rolling...Ch. 6.2 - A 75.0-kg paint cart with rubber bumpers is...Ch. 6.2 - A railroad car of mass 2.00 104 kg is traveling...Ch. 6.2 - Find the velocity of the railroad cars in Problem...Ch. 6.2 - One cart of mass 12.0 kg is moving 6.00 m/s to the...Ch. 6.2 - One cart of mass 15.0 kg is moving 5.00 m/s to the...Ch. 6.2 - A 1650-kg automobile moving south 12.0 m/s...Ch. 6.2 - A 16.0-g bullet is shot into a wooden block at...Ch. 6.2 - A 2450-kg automobile moving north 12.0 m/s...Ch. 6.3 - Two motorcycles of equal mass collide at a 90...Ch. 6.3 - Two pickup trucks crash at a 90 intersection. If...Ch. 6.3 - Two vehicles collide at a 90 intersection. If the...Ch. 6.3 - Two vehicles of equal mass collide at a 90...Ch. 6.3 - A vehicle with a mass of 1000kg is going east at a...Ch. 6.3 - Ball A with a mass of 0.500 kg is moving east at a...Ch. 6.3 - A vehicle with mass of 950kg is driving east with...Ch. 6.3 - A vehicle with a mass of 800kg is traveling west...Ch. 6 - Momentum is a equal to speed times weight b equal...Ch. 6 - Impulse is a. a force applied to an object b. the...Ch. 6 - Why do a slow-moving loaded truck and a speeding...Ch. 6 - How are impulse and change in momentum related?Ch. 6 - Why is follow-through important in hitting a...Ch. 6 - Describe in your own words the law of conservation...Ch. 6 - Describe conservation of momentum in terms of a...Ch. 6 - One billiard ball striking another is an example...Ch. 6 - One moving loaded railroad car striking and...Ch. 6 - A father and 8-year-old son are standing on ice...Ch. 6 - A truck with mass 1475 slugs travels 57.0 mi/h....Ch. 6 - A projectile with mass 27.0 kg is fired with a...Ch. 6 - A box is pushed with a force of 125 N for 2.00...Ch. 6 - What is the momentum of a bullet of mass 0.034 kg...Ch. 6 - A 4.00-g bullet is fired from a 4.50-kg gun with a...Ch. 6 - A 150-kg pile driver falls from a height of 7.5 m...Ch. 6 - A 15.0-g bullet is fired at a muzzle velocity of...Ch. 6 - What force is required to slow a 1250-kg car...Ch. 6 - One ball of mass 575 g traveling 3.50 m/s to the...Ch. 6 - A railroad car of mass 2.25 104 kg is traveling...Ch. 6 - A 195-g ball traveling 4.50 m/s to the right...Ch. 6 - Two trucks of equal mass collide at a 90...Ch. 6 - Ball A, of mass 0.35 kg, has a velocity 0.75 m/s...Ch. 6 - A coach knows it is vital that the volleyballs be...Ch. 6 - An automobile accident causes both the driver and...Ch. 6 - Several African tribes engage in a ritual much...Ch. 6 - Sally, who weighs 125 lb, knows that getting out...Ch. 6 - An automobile accident investigator needs to...
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- What external force is responsible for changing the momentum of a car moving along a horizontal road?arrow_forwardA piece of putty and a tennis ball with the same mass are thrown against a wall with the same velocity. Which object experience a greater impulse from the wall or are the impulses equal? Explain.arrow_forwardDescribe a system for which momentum is conserved but mechanical energy is not. Now the reverse: Describe a system for which kinetic energy is conserved but momentum is not.arrow_forward
- A 5.0-g egg falls from a 90-cm-high counter onto the floor and breaks. What impulse is exerted by the floor on the egg?arrow_forwardIs it possible for a small force to produce a larger impulse on a given object than a large force? Explain.arrow_forwardA punter drops a ball from rest vertically 1 meter down onto his foot. The ball leaves the foot with a speed of 18 m/s at an angle 55° above the horizontal. What is the impulse delivered by the foot (magnitude and direction)?arrow_forward
- Which has a larger magnitude of momentum: a 3000-kg elephant moving at 40 km/h or a 60-kg cheetah moving at 112 km/h?arrow_forwardCheck Your Understanding Would the ball’s change of momentum have been larger, smaller, or the same, if it had collided with the floor and stopped (without bouncing)? Would the ball’s change of momentum have been larger, smaller, or the same, if it had collided with the floor and stopped (without bouncing)?arrow_forwardWhen two objects collide, the impulse exerted on object 1 by object 2 is equal in magnitude and opposite and direction to the impulse exerted on object 2 by object 1: I[1on2]=I[2on1](11.8) And the change in their momenta is given by: p1=p2(11.9) Which of Newtons three laws justifies these two equations?arrow_forward
- Your physical education teacher throws a baseball to you at a certain speed and you catch it. The teacher is next going to throw you a medicine ball whose mass is ten times the mass of the baseball. You are given the following choices: You can have the medicine ball thrown with (a) the same speed as the baseball, (b) the same momentum, or (c) the same kinetic energy. Rank these choices from easiest to hardest to catch.arrow_forwardA cruise ship with a mass of 1.00107kg strikes a pier at a speed of 0.750 m/s. It comes to rest after traveling 6.00 m, damaging the ship, the pier, and the tugboat captain’s finances. Calculate the average force exerted on the pier using the concept of impulse. (Hint: First calculate the time it took to bring the ship to rest, assuming a constant force.)arrow_forwardRepeat the preceding problem but for a rocket that takes off from a space station, where there is no gravity other than the negligible gravity due to the space station.arrow_forward
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Impulse Derivation and Demonstration; Author: Flipping Physics;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9rwkTnTOB0s;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY