Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations and Connections
15th Edition
ISBN: 9781305289963
Author: Debora M. Katz
Publisher: Cengage Custom Learning
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Question
Chapter 11, Problem 68PQ
(a)
To determine
Whether the collision was elastic or inelastic
(b)
To determine
The object having greater mass.
(c)
To determine
The object which had larger initial kinetic energy.
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Chapter 11 Solutions
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations and Connections
Ch. 11.1 - Forensic Science Forensic science is the...Ch. 11.2 - Why does a coach instruct a gymnast to bend her...Ch. 11.3 - When two objects collide, the impulse exerted on...Ch. 11.3 - Prob. 11.4CECh. 11.5 - If a spacecraft is headed for the outer solar...Ch. 11.6 - The cue ball hits the eight-ball in a game of pool...Ch. 11 - When a spacecraft collides with a planet, it is...Ch. 11 - When a person feels that he is about to fall, he...Ch. 11 - A tall man walking at 1.25 m/s accidentally bumps...Ch. 11 - Prob. 4PQ
Ch. 11 - A basketball of mass m = 625 g rolls off the hoops...Ch. 11 - Prob. 6PQCh. 11 - Sven hits a baseball (m = 0.15 kg). He applies an...Ch. 11 - Prob. 8PQCh. 11 - Prob. 9PQCh. 11 - In a laboratory, a cart collides with a wall and...Ch. 11 - Prob. 11PQCh. 11 - A Show that Equation 11.4 (the impulsemomentum...Ch. 11 - A crate of mass M is initially at rest on a level,...Ch. 11 - Prob. 14PQCh. 11 - Two pucks in a laboratory are placed on an air...Ch. 11 - A truck collides with a small, empty parked car....Ch. 11 - Prob. 17PQCh. 11 - Prob. 18PQCh. 11 - A skater of mass m standing on ice throws a stone...Ch. 11 - A skater of mass 45.0 kg standing on ice throws a...Ch. 11 - Prob. 21PQCh. 11 - In a laboratory experiment, 1 a block of mass M is...Ch. 11 - Ezra (m = 25.0 kg) has a tire swing and wants to...Ch. 11 - A suspicious physics student watches a stunt...Ch. 11 - A 2.45-kg ball is shot into a 0.450-kg box that is...Ch. 11 - Prob. 26PQCh. 11 - Prob. 27PQCh. 11 - Prob. 28PQCh. 11 - A dart of mass m is fired at and sticks into a...Ch. 11 - A dart of mass m = 10.0 g is fired at and sticks...Ch. 11 - A bullet of mass m = 8.00 g is fired into and...Ch. 11 - Prob. 32PQCh. 11 - A bullet of mass m is fired into a ballistic...Ch. 11 - Prob. 34PQCh. 11 - One object (m1 = 0.200 kg) is moving to the right...Ch. 11 - Prob. 36PQCh. 11 - Prob. 37PQCh. 11 - Prob. 38PQCh. 11 - Two objects collide head-on (Fig. P11.39). The...Ch. 11 - Initially, ball 1 rests on an incline of height h,...Ch. 11 - Initially, ball 1 rests on an incline of height h,...Ch. 11 - In an attempt to produce exotic new particles, a...Ch. 11 - Pendulum bob 1 has mass m1. It is displaced to...Ch. 11 - Prob. 44PQCh. 11 - Prob. 45PQCh. 11 - Prob. 46PQCh. 11 - Prob. 47PQCh. 11 - Prob. 48PQCh. 11 - Two skateboarders, with masses m1 = 75.0 kg and m2...Ch. 11 - In a laboratory experiment, an electron with a...Ch. 11 - In Figure P11.51, a cue ball is shot toward the...Ch. 11 - A proton with an initial speed of 2.00 108 m/s in...Ch. 11 - A football player of mass 95 kg is running at a...Ch. 11 - Two bumper cars at the county fair are sliding...Ch. 11 - Two bumper cars at the county fair are sliding...Ch. 11 - Prob. 56PQCh. 11 - N A bomb explodes into three pieces A, B, and C of...Ch. 11 - Prob. 58PQCh. 11 - An object of mass m = 4.00 kg that is moving with...Ch. 11 - A wooden block of mass M is initially at rest at...Ch. 11 - Prob. 61PQCh. 11 - Prob. 62PQCh. 11 - In an experiment designed to determine the...Ch. 11 - From what might be a possible scene in the comic...Ch. 11 - Prob. 65PQCh. 11 - Two pucks in a laboratory are placed on an air...Ch. 11 - Assume the pucks in Figure P11.66 stick together...Ch. 11 - Prob. 68PQCh. 11 - Prob. 69PQCh. 11 - A ball of mass 50.0 g is dropped from a height of...Ch. 11 - Prob. 71PQCh. 11 - A pendulum consists of a wooden bob of mass M...Ch. 11 - Three runaway train cars are moving on a...Ch. 11 - Prob. 74PQCh. 11 - Rutherford fired a beam of alpha particles (helium...Ch. 11 - Prob. 76PQCh. 11 - Prob. 77PQCh. 11 - February 3, 2009, was a very snowy day along...Ch. 11 - A cart filled with sand rolls at a speed of 1.0...Ch. 11 - Prob. 80PQCh. 11 - Prob. 81PQCh. 11 - Prob. 82PQCh. 11 - Prob. 83PQCh. 11 - Prob. 84PQ
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- A 65.0-kg boy and his 40.0-kg sister, both wearing roller blades, face each other at rest. The girl pushes the boy hard, sending him backward with velocity 2.90 m/s toward the west. Ignore friction. (a) Describe the subsequent motion of the girl. (b) How much potential energy in the girls body is converted into mechanical energy of the boygirl system? (c) Is the momentum of the boygirl system conserved in the pushing-apart process? If so, explain how that is possible considering (d) there are large forces acting and (e) there is no motion beforehand and plenty of motion afterward.arrow_forwardYou are coasting on your 10-kg bicycle at 15 m/s and a 5.0-g bug splatters on your helmet. The bug was initially moving at 2.0 m/s in the same direction as you. If your mass is 60 kg, (a) what is the initial momentum of you plus your bicycle? (b) What is the initial momentum of the bug? (c) What is your change in velocity due to the collision with the bug? (d) What would the change in velocity have been if the bug were traveling in the opposite direction?arrow_forward(a) Calculate the momentum of a 2000-kg elephant charging a hunter at a speed of 7.50 m/s. (b) Compare the elephant's momentum with the momentum of a 0.0400-kg tranquilizer dart fired at a speed of 600 m/s. (c) What is the momentum of the 90.0-kg hunter running at 7.40 m/s after missing the elephant?arrow_forward
- A wooden block of mass M rests on a table over a large hole as in Figure P9.39. A bullet of mass m with an initial velocity of vi is fired upward into the bottom of the block and remains in the block after the collision. The block and bullet rise to a maximum height of h. (a) Describe how you would find the initial velocity of the bullet using ideas you have learned in this chapter. (b) Find an expression for the initial velocity of the bullet. Figure P9.39 Problems 39 and 40.arrow_forwardIn a head-on, inelastic collision, a 4,000-kg truck going 10 m/s east strikes a 1,000-kg car going 20 m/s west. (a) What is the speed and direction of the wreckage? (b) How much kinetic energy was lost in the Collision?arrow_forwardThis is a symbolic version of Problem 35. A railroad car of mass M moving at a speed v1 collides and couples with two coupled railroad cars, each of the same mass M and moving in the same direction at a speed v2. (a) What is the speed vf of the three coupled cars after the collision in terms of v1 and v2? (b) How much kinetic energy is lost in the collision? Answer in terms of M, v1, and v2.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