EBK PHYSICS FOR SCIENTISTS AND ENGINEER
9th Edition
ISBN: 8220100461262
Author: SERWAY
Publisher: Cengage Learning US
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Textbook Question
Chapter 10, Problem 10.16CQ
A person balances a meterstick in a horizontal position on the extended index fingers of her right and left hands. She slowly brings the two fingers together. The stick remains balanced, and the two fingers always meet at the 50-cm mark regardless of their original positions. (Try it!) Explain why that occurs.
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Chapter 10 Solutions
EBK PHYSICS FOR SCIENTISTS AND ENGINEER
Ch. 10 - A rigid object rotates in a counterclockwise sense...Ch. 10 - Consider again the pairs of angular positions for...Ch. 10 - Ethan and Rebecca are riding on a merry-go-round....Ch. 10 - (i) If you are trying to loosen a stubborn screw...Ch. 10 - You turn off your electric drill and find that the...Ch. 10 - A section of hollow pipe and a solid cylinder have...Ch. 10 - A ball rolls without slipping down incline A,...Ch. 10 - A cyclist rides a bicycle with a wheel radius of...Ch. 10 - Consider an object on a rotating disk a distance r...Ch. 10 - A wheel is rotating about a fixed axis with...
Ch. 10 - A grindstone increases in angular speed from 4.00...Ch. 10 - Suppose a cars standard tires are replaced with...Ch. 10 - Figure OQ10.6 shows a system of four particles...Ch. 10 - As shown in Figure OQ10.7, a cord is wrapped onto...Ch. 10 - A constant net torque is exerted on an object....Ch. 10 - Prob. 10.9OQCh. 10 - A toy airplane hangs from the ceiling at the...Ch. 10 - A solid aluminum sphere of radius R has moment of...Ch. 10 - Is it possible to change the translational kinetic...Ch. 10 - Must an object be rotating to have a nonzero...Ch. 10 - Suppose just two external forces act on a...Ch. 10 - Explain how you might use the apparatus described...Ch. 10 - Example 10.6 Angular Acceleration of a Wheel A...Ch. 10 - Explain why changing the axis of rotation of an...Ch. 10 - Suppose you have two eggs, one hard-boiled and the...Ch. 10 - Suppose you set your textbook sliding across a...Ch. 10 - (a) What is the angular speed of the second hand...Ch. 10 - One blade of a pair of scissors rotates...Ch. 10 - If you see an object rotating, is there...Ch. 10 - If a small sphere of mass M were placed at the end...Ch. 10 - Three objects of uniform densitya solid sphere, a...Ch. 10 - Which of the entries in Table 10.2 applies to...Ch. 10 - Figure CQ10.15 shows a side view of a childs...Ch. 10 - A person balances a meterstick in a horizontal...Ch. 10 - (a) Find the angular speed of the Earths rotation...Ch. 10 - A potters wheel moves uniformly from rest to an...Ch. 10 - During a certain time interval, the angular...Ch. 10 - A bar on a hinge starts from rest and rotates with...Ch. 10 - A wheel starts from rest and rotates with constant...Ch. 10 - A centrifuge in a medical laboratory rotates at an...Ch. 10 - An electric motor rotating a workshop grinding...Ch. 10 - A machine part rotates at an angular speed of...Ch. 10 - A dentists drill starts from rest. After 3.20 s of...Ch. 10 - Why is the following situation impossible?...Ch. 10 - A rotating wheel requires 3.00 s to rotate through...Ch. 10 - The tub of a washer goes into its spin cycle,...Ch. 10 - A spinning wheel is slowed down by a brake, giving...Ch. 10 - Review. Consider a tall building located on the...Ch. 10 - A racing car travels on a circular track of radius...Ch. 10 - Make an order-of-magnitude estimate of the number...Ch. 10 - A discus thrower (Fig. P10.9) accelerates a discus...Ch. 10 - Figure P10.18 shows the drive train of a bicycle...Ch. 10 - A wheel 2.00 m in diameter lies in a vertical...Ch. 10 - A car accelerates uniformly from rest and reaches...Ch. 10 - A disk 8.00 cm in radius rotates at a constant...Ch. 10 - Prob. 10.22PCh. 10 - A car traveling on a flat (unbanked), circular...Ch. 10 - A car traveling on a flat (unbanked), circular...Ch. 10 - In a manufacturing process, a large, cylindrical...Ch. 10 - Review. A small object with mass 4.00 kg moves...Ch. 10 - Find the net torque on the wheel in Figure P10.14...Ch. 10 - The fishing pole in Figure P10.28 makes an angle...Ch. 10 - An electric motor turns a flywheel through a drive...Ch. 10 - A grinding wheel is in the form of a uniform solid...Ch. 10 - A 150-kg merry-go-round in the shape of a uniform,...Ch. 10 - Review. A block of mass m1 = 2.00 kg and a block...Ch. 10 - A model airplane with mass 0.750 kg is tethered to...Ch. 10 - A disk having moment of inertia 100 kg m2 is free...Ch. 10 - The combination of an applied force and a friction...Ch. 10 - Review. Consider the system shown in Figure P10.36...Ch. 10 - A potters wheela thick stone disk of radius 0.500...Ch. 10 - Imagine that you stand tall and turn about a...Ch. 10 - A uniform, thin, solid door has height 2.20 m,...Ch. 10 - Two balls with masses M and m are connected by a...Ch. 10 - Figure P10.41 shows a side view of a car tire...Ch. 10 - Following the procedure used in Example 10.7,...Ch. 10 - Three identical thin rods, each of length L and...Ch. 10 - Rigid rods of negligible mass lying along the y...Ch. 10 - The four particles in Figure P10.45 are connected...Ch. 10 - Many machines employ cams for various purposes,...Ch. 10 - A war-wolf or trebuchet is a device used during...Ch. 10 - A horizontal 800-N merry-go-round is a solid disk...Ch. 10 - Big Ben, the nickname for the clock in Elizabeth...Ch. 10 - Consider two objects with m1 m2 connected by a...Ch. 10 - The top in Figure P10.51 has a moment of inertia...Ch. 10 - Why is the following situation impossible? In a...Ch. 10 - In Figure P10.53, the hanging object has a mass of...Ch. 10 - Review. A thin, cylindrical rod = 24.0 cm long...Ch. 10 - Review. An object with a mass of m = 5.10 kg is...Ch. 10 - This problem describes one experimental method for...Ch. 10 - A uniform solid disk of radius R and mass M is...Ch. 10 - The head of a grass string trimmer has 100 g of...Ch. 10 - A cylinder of mass 10.0 kg rolls without slipping...Ch. 10 - A solid sphere is released from height h from the...Ch. 10 - (a) Determine the acceleration of the center of...Ch. 10 - A smooth cube of mass m and edge length r slides...Ch. 10 - A uniform solid disk and a uniform hoop are placed...Ch. 10 - A tennis ball is a hollow sphere with a thin wall....Ch. 10 - A metal can containing condensed mushroom soup has...Ch. 10 - As shown in Figure 10.13 on page 306, toppling...Ch. 10 - Review. A 4.00-m length of light nylon cord is...Ch. 10 - An elevator system in a tall building consists of...Ch. 10 - A shaft is turning at 65.0 rad/s at time t = 0....Ch. 10 - A shaft is turning at angular speed at time t =...Ch. 10 - Review. A mixing beater consists of three thin...Ch. 10 - The hour hand and the minute hand of Big Ben, the...Ch. 10 - A long, uniform rod of length L and mass M is...Ch. 10 - A bicycle is turned upside down while its owner...Ch. 10 - A bicycle is turned upside down while its owner...Ch. 10 - Prob. 10.76APCh. 10 - Review. As shown in Figure P10.77, two blocks are...Ch. 10 - Review. A string is wound around a uniform disk of...Ch. 10 - The reel shown in Figure P10.79 has radius R and...Ch. 10 - A common demonstration, illustrated in Figure...Ch. 10 - A uniform solid sphere of radius r is placed on...Ch. 10 - Review. A spool of wire of mass M and radius R is...Ch. 10 - A solid sphere of mass m and radius r rolls...Ch. 10 - A thin rod of mass 0.630 kg and length 1.24 m is...Ch. 10 - Prob. 10.85APCh. 10 - Review. A clown balances a small spherical grape...Ch. 10 - A plank with a mass M = 6.00 kg rests on top of...Ch. 10 - As a gasoline engine operates, a flywheel turning...Ch. 10 - As a result of friction, the angular speed of a...Ch. 10 - To find the total angular displacement during the...Ch. 10 - A spool of thread consists of a cylinder of radius...Ch. 10 - A cord is wrapped around a pulley that is shaped...Ch. 10 - A merry-go-round is stationary. A clog is running...Ch. 10 - A uniform, hollow, cylindrical spool has inside...
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- A student sits on a freely rotating stool holding two dumbbells, each of mass 3.00 kg (Fig. P10.56). When his arms are extended horizontally (Fig. P10.56a), the dumbbells are 1.00 m from the axis of rotation and the student rotates with an angular speed of 0.750 rad/s. The moment of inertia of the student plus stool is 3.00 kg m2 and is assumed to be constant. The student pulls the dumbbells inward horizontally to a position 0.300 m from the rotation axis (Fig. P10.56b). (a) Find the new angular speed of the student. (b) Find the kinetic energy of the rotating system before and after he pulls the dumbbells inward. Figure P10.56arrow_forwardRepeat Example 10.15 in which the stick is free to have translational motion as well as rotational motion.arrow_forwardCalculate the moment of inertia of a skater given the following information. (a) The 60.0-kg skater is approximated as a cylinder that has a 0.110-m radius. (b) The skater with arms extended is approximately a cylinder that is 52.5 kg, has a 0.110-m radius, and has two 0.900-m-long arms which are 3.75 kg each and extend straight out from the cylinder like rods rotated about their ends.arrow_forward
- A playground merry-go-round of radius R = 2.00 m has a moment of inertia I = 250 kg m2 and is rotating at 10.0 rev/min about a frictionless, vertical axle. Facing the axle, a 25.0-kg child hops onto the merry-go-round and manages to sit down on the edge. What is the new angular speed of the merry-go-round?arrow_forwardA solid cube of wood of side 2a and mass M is resting on a horizontal surface. The cube is constrained to rotate about a fixed axis AB (Fig. P11.48). A bullet of mass m and speed v is shot at the face opposite ABCD at a height of 4a/3. The bullet becomes embedded in the cube. Find the minimum value of v required to tip the cube so that it falls on face ABCD. Assume m M. Figure P11.48arrow_forwardThree identical thin rods, each of length L and mass m, are welded perpendicular to one another as shown in Figure P10.43. The assembly is rotated about an axis that passes through the end of one rod and is parallel to another. Determine the moment of inertia of this structure about this axis.arrow_forward
- A light rope passes over a light, frictionless pulley. One end is fastened to a bunch of bananas of mass M, and a monkey of mass M clings to the other end (Fig. P11.32). The monkey climbs the rope in an attempt to reach the bananas. (a) Treating the system as consisting of the monkey, bananas, rope, and pulley, find the net torque on the system about the pulley axis. (b) Using the result of part (a), determine the total angular momentum about the pulley axis and describe the motion of the system. (c) Will the monkey reach the bananas? Figure P11.32arrow_forwardAdditional Problems A typical propeller of a turbine used to generate electricity from the wind consists of three blades as in Figure P8.75. Each blade has a length of L = 35 in and a mass of m = 420 kg. The propeller rotates at the rate of 25 rev/min. (a) Convert the angular speed of the propeller to units of rad/s. Find (b) the moment of inertia of the propeller about the axis of rotation and (c) the total kinetic, energy of the propeller. Figure P8.75arrow_forwardA uniform disk of mass m = 10.0 kg and radius r = 34.0 cm mounted on a frictionlessaxle through its center, and initially at rest, isacted upon by two tangential forces of equalmagnitude F, acting on opposite sides of itsrim until a point on the rim experiences acentripetal acceleration of 4.00 m/s2 (Fig.P13.73). a. What is the angular momentumof the disk at this time? b. If F = 2.00 N, howlong do the forces have to be applied to thedisk to achieve this centripetal acceleration? FIGURE P13.73arrow_forward
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Moment of Inertia; Author: Physics with Professor Matt Anderson;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrGhUTeIlWs;License: Standard Youtube License