PHYSICAL UNIVERSE W/ CONNECT
15th Edition
ISBN: 9781308534718
Author: KRAUSKOPF
Publisher: MCG/CREATE
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Textbook Question
Chapter 3, Problem 65E
The length of a rod is measured by several observers, one of whom is stationary with respect to the rod. What must be true of the value obtained by the stationary observer?
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
Two identical 0.800 kg masses are pressed against opposite ends of a light spring of force constant 1.75 N/cm, compressing the spring by 15.0 cm from its normal length.
a) Find the speed of each mass when it has moved free of the spring on a frictionless, horizontal table.
Two planets of mass 3 x 1025kg are release from rest 2.0 x 1012 m apart. What is the speed of the planets when they are half this distance apart?
Which of the variables—inertia, mass, kinetic energy, and internal energy—are invariant, and which depend on the reference frame of the person measuring them?
Chapter 3 Solutions
PHYSICAL UNIVERSE W/ CONNECT
Ch. 3 - Which of the following is not a unit of work? a....Ch. 3 - An object at rest may have a. velocity b. momentum...Ch. 3 - A moving object must have which one or more of the...Ch. 3 - When the momentum of a moving object is increased,...Ch. 3 - The total amount of energy (including the rest...Ch. 3 - When the speed of a moving object is halved, a....Ch. 3 - Two balls, one of mass 5 kg and the other of mass...Ch. 3 - A bomb dropped from an airplane explodes in...Ch. 3 - The operation of a rocket is based upon a. pushing...Ch. 3 - A spinning skater whose arms are at her sides then...
Ch. 3 - Prob. 11MCCh. 3 - The formula 12 mv2 for kinetic energy a. is the...Ch. 3 - A spacecraft has left the earth and is moving...Ch. 3 - The upper limit to the speed of an object with...Ch. 3 - It is not true that a. light is affected by...Ch. 3 - Albert Einstein did not discover that a. the...Ch. 3 - The work done in holding a 50-kg object at a...Ch. 3 - The work done in lifting 30 kg of bricks to a...Ch. 3 - A total of 4900 J is used to lift a 50-kg mass....Ch. 3 - The work a 300-W electric grinder can do in 5.0...Ch. 3 - A 150-kg yak has an average power output of 120 W....Ch. 3 - A 40-kg boy runs up a flight of stairs 4 m high in...Ch. 3 - Car A has a mass of 1000 kg and is moving at 60...Ch. 3 - A 1-kg object has a potential energy of 1 J...Ch. 3 - A 1-kg object has kinetic energy of 1 J when its...Ch. 3 - The 2-kg blade of an ax is moving at 60 m/s when...Ch. 3 - The highest MA that can be obtained by a system of...Ch. 3 - A machine has a MA of 6.0. The work input needed...Ch. 3 - A person uses a force of 300 N to pry up one end...Ch. 3 - A 1-kg ball is thrown in the air. When it is 10 m...Ch. 3 - A 10,000-kg freight car moving at 2 m/s collides...Ch. 3 - A 30-kg girl and a 25-kg boy are standing on...Ch. 3 - An object has a rest energy of 1 J when its mass...Ch. 3 - The smallest part of the total energy of the ball...Ch. 3 - The lightest particle in an atom is an electron,...Ch. 3 - A person holds a 10-kg package 1.2 m above the...Ch. 3 - Under what circumstances (if any) is no work done...Ch. 3 - The sun exerts a gravitational force of 4.0 1028...Ch. 3 - A crate is pushed across a horizontal floor at...Ch. 3 - A total of 490 J of work is needed to lift a body...Ch. 3 - A woman eats a cupcake and proposes to work off...Ch. 3 - The acceleration of gravity on the surface of Mars...Ch. 3 - The kilowatt-hour is a unit of what physical...Ch. 3 - The motor of a boat develops 60 kW when the boats...Ch. 3 - How much power must the legs of a 70-kg man...Ch. 3 - A weightlifter raises a 70-kg barbell from the...Ch. 3 - An escalator 14 m long is carrying a 70-kg person...Ch. 3 - A 700-kg horse whose power output is 1.0 hp is...Ch. 3 - A persons metabolic processes can usually operate...Ch. 3 - A crane whose motor has a power input of 5.0 kW...Ch. 3 - A total of 104 kg of water per second flows over a...Ch. 3 - Which of these energies might correspond to the KE...Ch. 3 - What is the speed of an 800-kg car whose KE is 250...Ch. 3 - A moving object whose initial KE is 10 J is...Ch. 3 - Is the work needed to bring a cars speed from 0 to...Ch. 3 - A 1-kg salmon is hooked by a fisherman and it...Ch. 3 - Prob. 22ECh. 3 - How long will it take a 1000-kg car with a power...Ch. 3 - Does every moving body possess kinetic energy?...Ch. 3 - As we will learn in Chap. 6, electric charges of...Ch. 3 - A 60-kg woman jumps off a wall 80 cm high and...Ch. 3 - Why does a nail become hot when it is hammered...Ch. 3 - A 3-kg stone is dropped from a height of 100 m....Ch. 3 - Prob. 29ECh. 3 - Prob. 30ECh. 3 - A ball is dropped from a height of 1 m and loses...Ch. 3 - A person sitting under a coconut palm is struck by...Ch. 3 - A skier is sliding downhill at 8 m/s when she...Ch. 3 - A force of 10 N is used to lift a 600-g ball from...Ch. 3 - A person uses a force of 49 N to raise a 30-kg...Ch. 3 - Prob. 36ECh. 3 - The human forearm is a class III lever. Find the...Ch. 3 - A ramp 20 m long slopes down 1.2 m to the edge of...Ch. 3 - In an effort to lose weight, a person runs 5 km...Ch. 3 - An 80-kg crate is raised 2 m from the ground by a...Ch. 3 - An 800-kg car coasts down a hill 40 m high with...Ch. 3 - (a) When an object at rest explodes into two parts...Ch. 3 - A golf ball and a Ping-Pong ball are dropped in a...Ch. 3 - Is it possible for an object to have more kinetic...Ch. 3 - What happens to the momentum of a car when it...Ch. 3 - The speed of an airplane doubles in flight. (a)...Ch. 3 - When the kinetic energy of an object is doubled,...Ch. 3 - What, if anything, happens to the speed of a...Ch. 3 - A ball of mass m rolling on a smooth surface...Ch. 3 - A railway car is at rest on a frictionless track....Ch. 3 - An empty dump truck coasts freely with its engine...Ch. 3 - A boy throws a 4-kg pumpkin at 8 m/s to a 40-kg...Ch. 3 - A 30-kg girl who is running at 3 m/s jumps on a...Ch. 3 - A 70-kg man and a 50-kg woman are in a 60-kg boat...Ch. 3 - The 176-g head of a golf club is moving at 45 m/s...Ch. 3 - A 40-kg skater moving at 4 m/s overtakes a 60-kg...Ch. 3 - The two skaters of Exercise 56 are moving in...Ch. 3 - A 1000-kg car moving east at 80 km/h collides...Ch. 3 - As the polar ice caps melt, the length of the day...Ch. 3 - All helicopters have two rotors. Some have both...Ch. 3 - The earthquake that caused the Indian Ocean...Ch. 3 - What are the two postulates from which Einstein...Ch. 3 - The theory of relativity predicts a variety of...Ch. 3 - What physical quantity will all observers always...Ch. 3 - The length of a rod is measured by several...Ch. 3 - Under what circumstances does it become...Ch. 3 - Why is it impossible for an object to move faster...Ch. 3 - The potential energy of a golf ball in a hole is...Ch. 3 - What is the effect on the law of conservation of...Ch. 3 - A certain walking person uses energy at an average...Ch. 3 - One kilogram of water at 0C contains 335 kJ of...Ch. 3 - When 1 g of gasoline is burned in an engine, about...Ch. 3 - Approximately 5.4 106 J of chemical energy is...Ch. 3 - Approximately 4 109 kg of matter is converted...
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
- Rank the following quantities of energy from largest to the smallest. State if any are equal. (a) the absolute value of the average potential energy of the SunEarth system (b) the average kinetic energy of the Earth in its orbital motion relative to the Sun (c) the absolute value of the total energy of the SunEarth systemarrow_forwardEqual work is carried out on two bodies A and B, initially at rest, and whose masses are M and 2M respectively. The relationship between their speed immediately after the completion of the work is:arrow_forwardWhen a body of mass 0.25 kg is attached to a vertical mass less spring, it is extended 5.0 cm from its unstretched length of 4.0 cm. The body and spring are placed on a horizontal frictionless surface and rotated about the held end of the spring at 2.0 rev/s. How far is the spring stretched?arrow_forward
- An object of mass 3.0 kg attached to a spring with a spring constant of k = 185 N/m rests on a frictionless horizontal surface. The other end of the spring is connected to the wall. Another object of mass 1.6 kg is thrown towards a mass of 3.0 kg and strikes it in a perfectly elastic collision. The maximum compression of the spring is 80 cm. Determine the rate of the incoming mass (mass 1.6 kg).arrow_forwardTwo blocks of masses 200 g and 500 g sit on a frictionless table with an essentially massless spring placed between them. They are pushed together until an energy of 3.0 J is stored in the spring. When released, the masses shoot off in opposite directions. What is the speed of the center of mass? and the 500-g block?arrow_forwardA 500-kg cannon and a supply of 30 cannon balls, each with a mass of 24.5 kg, are inside a sealed railroad car with a mass of 43000 kg and a length of 73 m. The cannon fire to the right; the car recoils to the left. The cannon balls remain in the car after hitting the wall. After all the cannon balls have been fired, what is the greatest distance the car can have moved from its original position? A spring of negligible mass is compressed between two masses on a frictionless table with sloping ramps at each end.arrow_forward
- "Two bodies of masses 5 and 7 kilograms are initially at rest on a horizontal frictionless surface. A light spring is compressed between the bodies, which are held together by a thin thread. After the spring is released by burning through the thread, the 5 kilogram body has a speed of 0.2 m/s. The speed of the 7 kilogram body is (in m/s)"arrow_forwardSuppose a lump of clay has a mass of 0.2 kg and it slides without friction across ice at a speed of 0.75 m/s. It collides with another lump of clay that is at rest and that has a mass of 0.35 kg. If the two lumps of clay stick together, what is their speed after the collision?arrow_forwardEinstein and Lorentz, avid tennis players, play a fast-paced game on a court where they stand 20.0 m from each other. They play without a net. The tennis ball has mass 0.0580 kg. Ignore gravity and assume that the ball travels parallel to the ground as it travels between the two players. Unless otherwise specified, all measurements are made by the two men. (a) Lorentz serves the ball at 80.0 m/s. What is the ball’s kinetic energy? (b) Einstein slams a return at 1.80 x 108 m/s. What is the ball’s kinetic energy? (c) During Einstein’s return of the ball in part (a), a white rabbit runs beside the court in the direction from Einstein to Lorentz. The rabbit has a speed of 2.20 x 108 m/s relative to the two men. What is the speed of the rabbit relative to the ball? (d) What does the rabbit measure as the distance from Einstein to Lorentz? (e) How much time does it take for the rabbit to run 20.0 m, according to the players? (f) The white rabbit uses his pocket watch to measure the time (as…arrow_forward
- A pendulum with a ball of mass 6.87 kg and length 14.2 m is released from rest at an angle of 54.18 degrees. What is the kinetic energy, in J, of the mass when it is at and angle of 22.55 degrees?arrow_forwardAt what speed must a particle move in order to double its mass?arrow_forwardA ball of mass 0.45 kg is fired with velocity 120 m/s into the barrel of a spring gun of mass 2.0 kg initially at rest on a frictionless surface. The ball sticks in the barrel at the point of maximum compression of the spring. No energy is lost to friction. What fraction of the ball's initial kinetic energy is stored in the spring?arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Modern PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781111794378Author:Raymond A. Serway, Clement J. Moses, Curt A. MoyerPublisher:Cengage LearningPrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage Learning
Modern Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781111794378
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Clement J. Moses, Curt A. Moyer
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: Foundations...
Physics
ISBN:9781133939146
Author:Katz, Debora M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Mechanical work done (GCSE Physics); Author: Dr de Bruin's Classroom;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OapgRhYDMvw;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY