College Physics
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9780134601823
Author: ETKINA, Eugenia, Planinšič, G. (gorazd), Van Heuvelen, Alan
Publisher: Pearson,
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Question
Chapter 7, Problem 72GP
(a)
To determine
The comparison of the speeds with which each piece, A, B and C of the lamp holder hits the ground when they fly off a lamp holder with equal speeds but in different directions, as shown in figure, after a spherical street lamp explodes accidentally.
(b)
To determine
The comparison of the times, in a qualitative manner, needed by each piece to reach the ground when they fly off a lamp holder with equal speeds but in different directions, as shown in figure, after a spherical street lamp explodes accidentally.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
A. What are the speeds of the two pucks after the collision?
B. Is energy lost or gained in the system? Support your answer by calculating the change inmechanical energy of the system.
Tennis balls are tested by being dropped from a height of 2.5 m onto a concrete floor. The 57 g ball hits the ground, compresses, then rebounds. A ball will be accepted for play if it rebounds to a height of about 1.4 m; it will be rejected if the bounce height is much more or much less than this.
Suppose a ball is dropped from 2.5 m and rebounds to 1.4 m.a. How fast is the ball moving just before it hits the floor?b. What is the ball’s speed just after leaving the floor?c. What happens to the “lost” energy?d. If the time of the collision with the floor is 6.0 ms, what is the average force on the ball during the impact? The following passages and associated questions are based on the
*Chapter 9, Problem 57
In the figure, a ball of mass m = 61 g is shot with speed v; = 26 m/s (in the negative direction of an x axis) into the barrel
of a spring gun of mass M = 247 g initially at rest on a frictionless surface. The ball sticks in the barrel at the point of
maximum compression of the spring. Assume that the increase in thermal energy due to friction between the ball and the
barrel is negligible. What fraction of the initial kinetic energy of the ball is stored in the spring?
1
the tolerance is +/-2%
Chapter 7 Solutions
College Physics
Ch. 7 - Review Question 7.1 Assuming that Earths orbit...Ch. 7 - Review Question 7.2 A system can possess energy...Ch. 7 - Review Question 7.3 When we use the work-energy...Ch. 7 - Review Question 7.4 If the magnitude of the force...Ch. 7 - Review Question 7.5 Why, when friction cannot be...Ch. 7 - Review Question 7.6 What would change in the...Ch. 7 - Review Question 7.7 Imagine that a collision...Ch. 7 - Review Question 7.8 Toyota says that the power of...Ch. 7 - Review Question 7.9 In this section you read that...Ch. 7 - In which of the following is positive work done by...
Ch. 7 - 2. Which answer best represents the system’s...Ch. 7 - An Atwood machine is shown in Figure Q7.3. As the...Ch. 7 - Prob. 4MCQCh. 7 - 5. Three processes are described below. Choose one...Ch. 7 - 6. Choose which statement describes a process in...Ch. 7 - 7. Which example(s) below involve(s) zero physics...Ch. 7 - 8. Estimate the change in gravitational potential...Ch. 7 - What does it mean if object 1 does +10 J of work...Ch. 7 - You pull on a spring, which obeys Hookes law, in...Ch. 7 - The graph in Figure Q7.11 shows the time...Ch. 7 - 12. A 1400-kg car is traveling on a level road at...Ch. 7 - Prob. 13MCQCh. 7 - Two clay balls are moving toward each other. The...Ch. 7 - 15. Is energy a physical phenomenon, a model, or a...Ch. 7 - 16. Your friend thinks that the escape speed...Ch. 7 - Suggest how you can measure the following...Ch. 7 - How can satellites stay in orbit without any jet...Ch. 7 - Why does the Moon have no atmosphere, but Earth...Ch. 7 - What will happen to Earth if our Sun becomes a...Ch. 7 - 21. In the equation , the gravitational potential...Ch. 7 - 22. You push a small cart by exerting a constant...Ch. 7 - 1. Jay fills a wagon with sand (about 20 kg) and...Ch. 7 - 2. You have a 15-kg suitcase and (a) slowly lift...Ch. 7 - * You use a rope to slowly pull a sled and its...Ch. 7 - A rope attached to a truck pulls a 180-kg...Ch. 7 - 5. You lift a 25-kg child 0.80 m, slowly carry him...Ch. 7 - A truck runs into a pile of sand, moving 0.80 m as...Ch. 7 - 7. A 0.50-kg block is placed in a straight gutter...Ch. 7 - s up a smooth incline, which makes an angle with...Ch. 7 - 9. ** It is a windy day. You are moving a 20-kg...Ch. 7 - A 5.0-kg rabbit and a 12-kg Irish setter have the...Ch. 7 - Prob. 11PCh. 7 - * A pickup truck (2268 kg) and a compact car (1100...Ch. 7 - * When does the kinetic energy of a car change...Ch. 7 - * When exiting the highway, a 1100-kg car is...Ch. 7 - Prob. 15PCh. 7 - 16. * Flea jump flea pushes off a surface by...Ch. 7 - * Roller coaster ride A roller coaster car drops a...Ch. 7 - 18. * BIO EST Heart pumps blood The heart does...Ch. 7 - 19. * Wind energy Air circulates across Earth in...Ch. 7 - 20. * BIO Bone break The tibia bone in the lower...Ch. 7 - 21. * BIO EST Climbing Mt. Everest In 1953 Sir...Ch. 7 - 22. A door spring is difficult to stretch. (a)...Ch. 7 - * A moving car has 40,000 J of kinetic energy...Ch. 7 - 24. * The force required to stretch a slingshot by...Ch. 7 - Jim is driving a 2268-kg pickup truck at 20 m/s...Ch. 7 - 26. * A car skids 18 m on a level road while...Ch. 7 - s mass is m. An average friction force of...Ch. 7 - Prob. 28PCh. 7 - Prob. 29PCh. 7 - 30. In a popular new hockey game, the players use...Ch. 7 - 31. The top of a descending ski slope is 50 m...Ch. 7 - * If 20% of the gravitational potential energy...Ch. 7 - Prob. 33PCh. 7 - 34. A driver loses control of a car, drives off an...Ch. 7 - * You are pulling a box so it moves at increasing...Ch. 7 - s speed increases from zero to 4.0 m/s in a...Ch. 7 - 37. ** EST Hit by a hailstone A 0.030-kg hailstone...Ch. 7 - 38. * BIO Froghopper jump Froghoppers may be the...Ch. 7 - 39. * Bar chart Jeopardy 1 Describe in words and...Ch. 7 - * Bar chart Jeopardy 2 Describe in words and with...Ch. 7 - 41. * Equation Jeopardy 1 Construct a qualitative...Ch. 7 - * Equation Jeopardy 2 Construct a qualitative...Ch. 7 - Prob. 43PCh. 7 - 44. * Evaluation 2 Your friend provides a solution...Ch. 7 - 45. A crab climbs up a vertical rock with a...Ch. 7 - 46 * Work-energy bar charts for a person going...Ch. 7 - Prob. 47PCh. 7 - * A 1060-kg car moving west at 16 m/s collides...Ch. 7 - * You fire an 80-g arrow so that it is moving at...Ch. 7 - 50. * You fire a 50-g arrow that moves at an...Ch. 7 - * To confirm the results of Problem 7.50, you try...Ch. 7 - 52. * Somebody tells you that Figure P7.52 shows...Ch. 7 - 54. A roofing shingle elevator is lifting a...Ch. 7 - 55. (a) What is the power involved in lifting a...Ch. 7 - * A fire engine must lift 30 kg of water a...Ch. 7 - * BIO Internal energy change while biking You set...Ch. 7 - * Climbing Mt. Mitchell An 82-kg hiker climbs to...Ch. 7 - * BIO EST Sears stair climb The fastest time for...Ch. 7 - * BIO EST Exercising so you can eat ice cream You...Ch. 7 - 61. ** BIO Salmon move upstream In the past,...Ch. 7 - * EST Estimate the maximum horsepower of the...Ch. 7 - Prob. 63PCh. 7 - At what distance from Earth is the gravitational...Ch. 7 -
65. * Possible escape of different air molecule...Ch. 7 - Determine the escape speed for a rocket to leave...Ch. 7 - Determine the escape speed for an object to leave...Ch. 7 - If the Sun were to become a black hole, how much...Ch. 7 - * A satellite moves in elliptical orbit around...Ch. 7 - 70. * Determine the maximum radius Earth's Moon...Ch. 7 - 71. You throw a clay ball vertically upward. The...Ch. 7 - Prob. 72GPCh. 7 - Prob. 73GPCh. 7 - 74 * EST A “gravity force car” is powered by the...Ch. 7 - * Loop the loop You are given a loop raceway for...Ch. 7 - 76. ** Atwood machine Two blocks of masses hang...Ch. 7 - andm2 are connected with a string that passes over...Ch. 7 - of all species became extinct, ending the reign of...Ch. 7 - s cradle is a toy that consists of several metal...Ch. 7 - 81. ** Six Flags roller coaster A loop-the-loop on...Ch. 7 - ** Designing a ride You are asked to help design a...Ch. 7 - BIO Metabolic rate Energy for our activities is...Ch. 7 - BIO Metabolic rate Energy for our activities is...Ch. 7 - BIO Metabolic rate Energy for our activities is...Ch. 7 - BIO Metabolic rate Energy for our activities is...Ch. 7 - BIO Metabolic rate Energy for our activities is...Ch. 7 -
BIO Kangaroo hopping Hopping is an efficient...Ch. 7 - BIO Kangaroo hopping Hopping is an efficient...Ch. 7 - BIO Kangaroo hopping Hopping is an efficient...Ch. 7 - BIO Kangaroo hopping Hopping is an efficient...Ch. 7 - BIO Kangaroo hopping Hopping is an efficient...Ch. 7 - BIO Kangaroo hopping Hopping is an efficient...
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
- In Figure P11.51, a cue ball is shot toward the eight-ball on a pool table. The cue ball is shot at the eight-ball with a speed of 8.00 m/s in a direction 30.0 from the y axis. Both balls have the same mass of 0.170 kg. After the balls undergo an elastic collision, the eight-ball travels in the negative x direction into the side pocket. What is the velocity of the cue ball after this collision? FIGURE P11.51arrow_forwardProblems 44 and 45 are paired. C A model rocket is shot straight up. As it reaches the highest point in its trajectory, it explodes in midair into three pieces with velocities indicated by the arrows in Figure P10.44, as viewed from directly above the explosion. Rank the mass of each piece in order from smallest to largest and justify your answer. FIGURE P10.44 Problems 44 and 45.arrow_forwardTwo pucks in a laboratory are placed on an air table (Fig. P11.66). Puck 2 has four times the mass of puck 1 (m2 = 4m1). Initially, puck 1s speed is three times puck 2s speed (v1i = 3v2i), puck 1s position is r1i=x1ii, and puck 2s position is r2i=y2ij. The pucks collide at the origin. a. Copy Figure P11.66 and then add vCM to your sketch. b. Does puck 2 travel a greater distance, lesser distance, or the same distance as puck 1? c. Find an expression for y2i in terms of x1i. d. If puck 1 moves 1.33 m, how far does puck 2 move before the collision? FIGURE P11.66 Problems the origin.arrow_forward
- A 44.0-kg child finds himself trapped on the surface of a frozen lake, 10.0 m from the shore. The child slips with each step on the frictionless ice and remains the same distance from the shoreline. Egged on by his parents, he throws a 0.750-kg ball he is carrying toward the center of the lake with a horizontal speed of 1.50 m/s, in the direction opposite that of the shoreline. a. Does the act of throwing the ball cause the child to move? If so, what are the speed and the direction of his motion with respect to the Earth? b. What are the forces acting on the child when he throws the ball?arrow_forwardA truck collides with a small, empty parked car. Explain your answers to the parts below. a. Compare the force exerted by the truck on the car with the force exerted by the car on the truck. b. Compare the impulse exerted by the truck on the car with the impulse exerted by the car on the truck. c. Compare the change in the trucks momentum with the change in the cars momentum.arrow_forwardA crate of mass M is initially at rest on a frictionless, level table. A small block of mass m (m M) moves toward the crate as shown in Figure P10.31. Later, the block and crate are stuck together and are moving with some final speed. The momentum of the blockcrate system is the same both before and after the collision. Is the magnitude of the change in momentum of the crate greater than, less than, or equal to the magnitude of the change in the momentum of the block? Explain. FIGURE P10.31arrow_forward
- A suspicious physics student watches a stunt performed at an ice show. In the stunt, a performer shoots an arrow into a bale of hay (Fig. P11.24). Another performer rides on the bale of hay like a cowboy. After the arrow enters the bale, the balearrow system slides roughly 5 m along the ice. Estimate the initial speed of the arrow. Is there a trick to this stunt? FIGURE P11.24arrow_forwardIn a laboratory, a cart collides with a wall and bounces back. Figure P11.10 shows a graph of the force exerted by the wall versus time. a. Find the impulse exerted by the wall on the cart. b. What is the average force exerted by the wall on the cart? c. If the cart has a mass of 0.448 kg, what is its change in velocity? d. Make a sketch of the situation. Include a coordinate system and explain the significance of the signs in parts (a) through (c). FIGURE P11.10arrow_forwardIn a laboratory experiment, an electron with a kinetic energy of 50.5 keV is shot toward another electron initially at rest (Fig. P11.50). (1 eV = 1.602 1019 J) The collision is elastic. The initially moving electron is deflected by the collision. a. Is it possible for the initially stationary electron to remain at rest after the collision? Explain. b. The initially moving electron is detected at an angle of 40.0 from its original path. What is the speed of each electron after the collision? FIGURE P11.50arrow_forward
- A model rocket is shot straight up and explodes at the top of its trajectory into three pieces as viewed from above and shown in Figure P10.44. The masses of the three pieces are mA = 100.0 g, mB = 20.0 g, and mC = 30.0 g. Immediately after the explosion, piece A is traveling at 1.50 m/s, and piece B is traveling at 7.00 m/s in a direction 30 below the negative x axis as shown. What is the velocity of piece C? FIGURE P10.44 Problems 44 and 45. 45. We can use the conservation of momentum (Eq. 10.9). The total initial momentum is zero, so the sum of all the final momenta should be zero. mAvAf+mBvBf+mCvCf=0 This velocities for A and B can be expressed as vectors. vAf=1.50jm/svBf=(7.00im/s)cos30(7.00jm/s)sin30=(6.06i3.50j)m/s We can now solve the momentum equation. (100.0g)(1.50jm/s)+(20.0g)(6.06i3.50j)m/s+(30.0g)vCf=0vCf=(4.04i2.67j)m/s The velocity of piece C is down and to the right as expected.arrow_forwardN A bomb explodes into three pieces A, B, and C of equal mass. Piece A flies with a speed of 40.0 m/s, and piece B with a speed of 30.0 m/s at an angle of 90° relative to the direction of A as shown in Figure P11.57. Determine the speed of piece C and the direction of its velocity relative to the direction of piece A.arrow_forwardTwo pucks in a laboratory are placed on an air table. Puck 1 has twice the mass of puck 2. They are pushed toward each other and strike in a head-on collision. Initially, puck 2 is twice as fast as puck 1. a. What is the total momentum before the collision? b. What is the center-of-mass velocity before the collision? c. If the pucks are initially 2.70 m apart, how far did puck 1 move before the collision?arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage LearningPrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern ...PhysicsISBN:9781337553292Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage Learning
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology ...PhysicsISBN:9781305116399Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781938168000Author:Paul Peter Urone, Roger HinrichsPublisher:OpenStax CollegePhysics for Scientists and EngineersPhysicsISBN:9781337553278Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage Learning
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...
Physics
ISBN:9781133939146
Author:Katz, Debora M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern ...
Physics
ISBN:9781337553292
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology ...
Physics
ISBN:9781305116399
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781938168000
Author:Paul Peter Urone, Roger Hinrichs
Publisher:OpenStax College
Physics for Scientists and Engineers
Physics
ISBN:9781337553278
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning