College Physics: Explore And Apply, Volume 2 (2nd Edition)
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9780134862910
Author: Eugenia Etkina, Gorazd Planinsic, Alan Van Heuvelen, Gorzad Planinsic
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 10, Problem 11P
* A cart at the end of a spring undergoes
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College Physics: Explore And Apply, Volume 2 (2nd Edition)
Ch. 10 - Review Question 10.1 Can we say that the period of...Ch. 10 - Review Question 10.2 The velocity of an object...Ch. 10 - Review Question 10.3
What will happen to the...Ch. 10 - Review Question 10.4 The period of vibration of a...Ch. 10 - Review Question 10.5 Your grandfathers pendulum...Ch. 10 - Why was it important to assume that the springs...Ch. 10 - Review Question 10.7 What features of damped...Ch. 10 - Review Question 10.8 Describe the phenomenon of...Ch. 10 - 1. What are the features that make vibrational...Ch. 10 - 2. What does it mean if the amplitude of an...
Ch. 10 - 3. What does it mean if the period of an objectβs...Ch. 10 - 4. What is the period of the kinetic or the...Ch. 10 - 5. A cart undergoing simple harmonic motion has a...Ch. 10 - The period of the object attached to a spring is...Ch. 10 - You have a simple harmonic oscillator. Where is...Ch. 10 - You have a simple harmonic oscillator. Where is...Ch. 10 - Which of the following arguments can be used to...Ch. 10 - 10. (a) Give three common examples of vibrational...Ch. 10 - An object of known mass hangs at the end of a...Ch. 10 - Describe two different ways to estimate the spring...Ch. 10 - You have a small metal ball attached to a 1.0-m...Ch. 10 - 14. A pendulum clock is running too fast. Explain...Ch. 10 - What simplifications were used to derive the...Ch. 10 - A pendulum clock is moved from the Mississippi...Ch. 10 - 17. Oil is often found in a geological structure...Ch. 10 - A pendulum and a block hanging at the end of a...Ch. 10 - Will me frequency of vibration of a swing when you...Ch. 10 - The amplitude of vibration of a swing slowly...Ch. 10 - 23. If you walk with your arms hanging down, they...Ch. 10 - You have a pendulum with a 1-m string. What is the...Ch. 10 - 1. A low-friction cart is placed between two...Ch. 10 - * You have a ball bearing ano a bowl. You let the...Ch. 10 - 3. Draw a sketch of a pendulum indicate the...Ch. 10 - Draw a graph showing the position-versus-time...Ch. 10 - Suppose that at time zero the can attached to the...Ch. 10 - * (a) Sketch a motion diagram and a...Ch. 10 - * Devise a position-versus-time function that...Ch. 10 - * The position of a vibrating object changes as a...Ch. 10 - * The velocity of a vibrating object changes as a...Ch. 10 - 11. * A cart at the end of a spring undergoes...Ch. 10 - 12. ** Refer to the situation in Problem 10.1. (a)...Ch. 10 - You exert a 100-N pull on the end of a spring....Ch. 10 - Metronome You want to make a metronome for music...Ch. 10 - Determine the frequency of vibration of the cart...Ch. 10 - 16. * A spring with a cart at its end vibrates at...Ch. 10 - 17. A cart with mass m vibrating at the end of a...Ch. 10 - 18. * A 300-g apple is placed on a horizontal...Ch. 10 - ** A 2.0-kg cart vibrates at the end of an 18-N/m...Ch. 10 - * What were the main ideas that we used to derive...Ch. 10 - 21. * A spring with a spring constant of 1200 N/m...Ch. 10 - 22. * A person exerts a 15-N force on a cart...Ch. 10 - 23. A spring with spring constant has a 1.4-kg...Ch. 10 - * Proportional reasoning By what factor must we...Ch. 10 - Proportional reasoning By what factor must we...Ch. 10 - 26. Monkey trick at zoo A monkey has a cart with a...Ch. 10 - 27. * A frictionless cart attached to a spring...Ch. 10 - A 2.0-kg cart attached to a spring undergoes...Ch. 10 - 29 * The motion of a cart attached to a horizontal...Ch. 10 - 30. Pendulum clock Shawn wants to build a clock...Ch. 10 - Show that the expression for the frequency of a...Ch. 10 - A pendulum swings with amplitude 0.020 m and...Ch. 10 - 33. * Proportional reasoning You are designing a...Ch. 10 - 34. * Building demolition A 500-kg ball at the end...Ch. 10 - 35. * You have a pendulum with a long string whose...Ch. 10 - * Variations in g The frequency of a person's...Ch. 10 - 37. EST A graph of position versus time for an...Ch. 10 - Determine the period of a 1.3-m-long pendulum on...Ch. 10 - * You have a simple pendulum that consists of a...Ch. 10 - * Equation Jeopardy The following expression...Ch. 10 - 41. * Trampoline vibration When a 60-kg boy sits...Ch. 10 - * Proportional reasoning if you double the...Ch. 10 - 43. * Pendulum on Mars The frequency of a pendulum...Ch. 10 - 44. * bio EST Annoying sound low-frequency...Ch. 10 - 45.** A 1.2-kg block sliding at 6.0 m/s on a...Ch. 10 - 108 kg. The tower sways back and forth at a...Ch. 10 - ** You shoot a 0.050-kg arrow into a 0.50-kg...Ch. 10 - 48. * You have a pendulum whose length is 1.3 m...Ch. 10 - * You hang a 0.10-kg block from a spring, causing...Ch. 10 - 50. * imagine that you have a cart on a spring...Ch. 10 - 51. Describe one situation from everyday life in...Ch. 10 - EST twins on a swing How frequently do you need to...Ch. 10 - 53. (a) Determine the maximum speed of a girl on a...Ch. 10 - Prob. 54PCh. 10 - 55. * Feeling road vibrations in a car if the...Ch. 10 - 57. A spring oscillator and a simple pendulum have...Ch. 10 - * You attach a block (mass m) to a spring (spring...Ch. 10 - * You attach a 1.6-kg object to a spring, pull it...Ch. 10 - 60. * Traveling through Earth A hole is drilled...Ch. 10 - 61. * EST Estimate the effective spring constant...Ch. 10 - *Galileos pendulum The length L of a pendulum is...Ch. 10 - 63. * A 0.5-kg low-friction cart is moving at...Ch. 10 - 103N/m. Determine (a) by how much the ball...Ch. 10 - 67. * A 5.0-g bullet traveling horizontally at an...Ch. 10 - at the start of the swinging. (a) Determine an...Ch. 10 - 70. ** Foucault's pendulum in 1851, the French...Ch. 10 - pushed to the left with initial speed v0....Ch. 10 - Prob. 72RPPCh. 10 - Prob. 73RPPCh. 10 - Prob. 74RPPCh. 10 - Prob. 75RPPCh. 10 - Prob. 76RPPCh. 10 - Prob. 77RPPCh. 10 - BIO Resonance vibration transfer and the ear When...Ch. 10 - BIO Resonance vibration transfer and the ear When...Ch. 10 - BIO Resonance vibration transfer and the ear When...Ch. 10 - BIO Resonance vibration transfer and the ear When...Ch. 10 - BIO Resonance vibration transfer and the ear When...
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- A uniform annular ring of mass m and inner and outer radii a and b, respectively, is pivoted around an axis perpendicular to the plane of the ring at point P (Fig. P16.35). Determine its period of oscillation. FIGURE P16.35arrow_forwardA block with mass m = 0.1 kg oscillates with amplitude .A = 0.1 in at the end of a spring with force constant k = 10 N/m on a frictionless, horizontal surface. Rank the periods of the following situations from greatest to smallest. If any periods are equal, show their equality in your tanking, (a) The system is as described above, (b) The system is as described in situation (a) except the amplitude is 0.2 m. (c) The situation is as described in situation (a) except the mass is 0.2 kg. (d) The situation is as described in situation (a) except the spring has force constant 20 N/m. (e) A small resistive force makes the motion underdamped.arrow_forward(a) A hanging spring stretches by 35.0 cm when an object of mass 450 g is hung on it at rest. In this situation, we define its position as x = 0. The object is pulled down an additional 18.0 cm and released from rest to oscillate without friction. What is its position x at a moment 84.4 s later? (b) Find the distance traveled by the vibrating object in part (a), (c) What If? Another hanging spring stretches by 35.5 cm when an object of mass 440 g is hung on it at rest. We define this new position as x = 0. This object is also pulled down an additional 18.0 cm and released from rest to oscillate without friction. Find its position 84.4 s later, (d) Find the distance traveled by the object in part (c). (e) Why are the answers to parts (a) and (c) so different when the initial data in parts (a) and (c) are so similar and the answers to parts (b) and (d) are relatively close? Does this circumstance reveal a fundamental difficulty in calculating the future?arrow_forward
- (a) If frequency is not constant for some oscillation, can the oscillation be simple harmonic motion? (b) Can you mink of any examples of harmonic motion where the frequency may depend on the amplitude?arrow_forwardA block of mass m rests on a frictionless, horizontal surface and is attached to two springs with spring constants k1 and k2 (Fig. P16.22). It is displaced to the right and released. Find an expression for the angular frequency of oscillation of the resulting simple harmonic motion. FIGURE P16.22 Problems 22 and 81.arrow_forwardAn object-spring system moving with simple harmonic motion has an amplitude A. When the kinetic energy of the object equals twice the potential energy stored in the spring, what is the position x of the object? (a) A (b) A (c) A/3 (d) 0 (e) none of those answersarrow_forward
- A baby bounces up and down in her crib. Her mass is 12.5 kg, and the crib mattress can be modeled as a light spring with force constant 700 N/m. (a) The baby soon learns to bounce with maximum amplitude and minimum effort by bending her knees at what frequency? (b) If she were to use the mattress as a trampoline losing contact with it for part of each cyclewhat minimum amplitude of oscillation does she require?arrow_forwardA restaurant manager has decorated his retro diner by hanging (scratched) vinyl LP records from thin wires. The records have a mass of 180 g, a diameter of 12 in., and negligible thickness. The records oscillate as torsion pendulums. a. Records hung from a small hole near their rims have a period of roughly 3.5 s (Fig. P16.41A). What is the torsion spring constant of the wire? b. If a record is hung from its center hole using a wire of the same torsion spring constant (Fig. P16.41B), what is its period of oscillation? FIGURE P16.41arrow_forwardA simple pendulum has mass 1.20 kg and length 0.700 m. (a) What is the period of the pendulum near the surface of Earth? (b) If the same mass is attached to a spring, what spring constant would result in the period of motion found in part (a)?arrow_forward
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