EBK COLLEGE PHYSICS
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9780134605500
Author: ETKINA
Publisher: PEARSON CO
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Textbook Question
Chapter 4, Problem 22P
Car stopping distance and friction A car traveling at 60 mi /h (97 km /h) can stop in 48 m on a level road. Determine the coefficient of friction between the tires and the road. Assume that the car starts skidding the moment the driver hits the brakes. Is this kinetic or static friction? Explain.
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As a girl pushes an object across a wood floor, she suddenly comes to an
area where the floor has been waxed recently, making it slippery. What
becomes true of the coefficient of kinetic friction?
A. The coefficient of kinetic friction increases.
B. The coefficient of kinetic friction decreases.
C. The coefficient of kinetic friction becomes zero.
D. The coefficient of kinetic friction becomes negative.
If a horizontal force is applied to an object, how can you tell if an object will start moving?
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C.The object will start moving if the applied force is greater than the minimum static friction.
D.The object will start moving if the applied force is greater than the maximum kinetic friction.
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Chapter 4 Solutions
EBK COLLEGE PHYSICS
Ch. 4 - Review Question 4.1 When does a vector have a...Ch. 4 - Review Question 4.2 The x- and y-components of...Ch. 4 - Review Question 4.3 What is the force of friction...Ch. 4 - Review Question 4.4 For problems involving objects...Ch. 4 - Review Question 4.5 Why do we need to resolve the...Ch. 4 - Review Question 4.6
You read in this section that...Ch. 4 - 1. A car accelerates along a road. Identify the...Ch. 4 - 2. A person pushes a 10-kg crate exerting a 200-N...Ch. 4 - Compare the ease of pulling a lawn mower and...Ch. 4 - 4. You simultaneously release two balls: one you...
Ch. 4 - You shoot an arrow with a bow. The following is...Ch. 4 - In what reference frame does a projectile launched...Ch. 4 - In Table 4.6 we found that the two balls touched...Ch. 4 - 8. While running at constant velocity, how should...Ch. 4 - 9. You hold a block on a horizontal, frictionless...Ch. 4 - 10. In the process described in the previous...Ch. 4 - Suppose that two blocks are positioned on an...Ch. 4 - 12. A box containing some stones is resting on a...Ch. 4 - For the following two questions, the answer...Ch. 4 - 14. A block is resting on a rough inclined...Ch. 4 -
15. A box with a heavy television set in it...Ch. 4 - 16. How can an Atwood machine be used to determine...Ch. 4 - 17. Your friend is on Rollerblades holding a...Ch. 4 - Explain why a car starts skidding when a driver...Ch. 4 - 19. Explain why old tires need to be replaced.
Ch. 4 - 20. Explain how friction helps you to walk.
Ch. 4 - 21. Explain why you might fall forward when you...Ch. 4 - Explain why you might fall backward when you slip.Ch. 4 - Explain why the tires of your car can spin out...Ch. 4 - You throw two identical balls simultaneously at...Ch. 4 - 25. Your friend says that the vertical force...Ch. 4 - Your friend says that a projectile launched at an...Ch. 4 - An object of mass m1 placed on an inclined plane...Ch. 4 - 28 An object of mass m1 placed on an inclined...Ch. 4 - 29. A horse is pulling a sled. If the force...Ch. 4 - 30. If you kick a block so that it starts moving...Ch. 4 - Determine the x- and y-components of each force...Ch. 4 - 2. Determine the x- and y-components of each force...Ch. 4 - * Determine the x- and y-components of each...Ch. 4 - 4 * The x- and y-components of several unknown...Ch. 4 - * The x- and y-scalar components of several...Ch. 4 - 6. * Three ropes pull on a knot shown in Figure...Ch. 4 - * Figure P4.7 shows an unlabeled force diagram for...Ch. 4 - For each of the following situations, draw the...Ch. 4 - * Write Newtons second law in component form for...Ch. 4 - For the situations described here, construct a...Ch. 4 - * Write Newtons second law in component form for...Ch. 4 - Apply Newtons second law in component form for the...Ch. 4 - Apply Newtons second law in component form for the...Ch. 4 - 14. * Equation Jeopardy 1 The three sets of...Ch. 4 - * You exert a force of 100 N on a rope that pulls...Ch. 4 - 16. * You exert a force of a known magnitude F on...Ch. 4 - * Olympic 100-m dash start At the start of his...Ch. 4 - 18. * Your own accelerometer A train has an...Ch. 4 - * EST Finn and Hazel are using a battery-powered...Ch. 4 - A 91.0-kg refrigerator sits on the floor. The...Ch. 4 - A 60-kg student sitting on a hardwood floor does...Ch. 4 - Car stopping distance and friction A car traveling...Ch. 4 - 23. * A 50-kg box rests on the floor. The...Ch. 4 - 24. * Marsha is pushing down and to the right on a...Ch. 4 - * You want to determine the coefficient of kinetic...Ch. 4 - * A wagon is accelerating to the right. A book is...Ch. 4 - s. Determine an expression for the minimum...Ch. 4 - * A car has a mass of 1520 kg. While traveling at...Ch. 4 - m/s2 when pulled by a rope exerting a 120-N force...Ch. 4 - 30. ** A crate of mass m sitting on a horizontal...Ch. 4 - * EST You absentmindedly leave your book bag on...Ch. 4 - 32. * Block 1 is on a horizontal surface with a...Ch. 4 - 33. * You want to use a rope to pull a 10-kg box...Ch. 4 - 34. * A car with its wheels locked rests on a...Ch. 4 - 35. Olympic skier Olympic skier Tina Maze skis...Ch. 4 - * Another Olympic skier Bode Miller. 80-kg...Ch. 4 - * A book slides off a desk that is tilted 15...Ch. 4 - * Helge, Steve, and Heidi are sitting on a sled on...Ch. 4 - 40. * When traveling on an airplane you get meals...Ch. 4 - 41. Skier A 52-kg skier starts at rest and slides...Ch. 4 - 42. * Ski rope tow You agree to build a backyard...Ch. 4 - 43. * Soapbox racecar A soapbox derby racecar...Ch. 4 - 44. * A person is pushing two carts that are...Ch. 4 - 45. * BIO Whiplash Experience A car sitting at...Ch. 4 - Iditarod race practice The dogs of four-time...Ch. 4 - angle above the horizontal. The other end of the...Ch. 4 - * Rope 1 pulls horizontally, exerting a force of...Ch. 4 - * Three sleds of masses m1,m2,m3 are on a smooth...Ch. 4 - 50. ** Repeat Problem 4.49 , only this time with...Ch. 4 - 51. * A skier is moving down a snowy hill with an...Ch. 4 - ** A person holds a 200-g block that is connected...Ch. 4 - 53. ** Two blocks of masses are connected to each...Ch. 4 - 54. ** The 20-kg block shown in Figure P4.54 ...Ch. 4 - * A squirrel jumps of a roof in the horizontal...Ch. 4 - * A frog jumps at an angle 30 above the...Ch. 4 - 57. A bowling ball rolls off a table. Draw a force...Ch. 4 - 58 * A tennis ball is served from the back line of...Ch. 4 - 59. * Equation Jeopardy 3 The equations below...Ch. 4 - 60 * EST An airplane is delivering food to a small...Ch. 4 - A ball moves in an arc through the air (see Figure...Ch. 4 - A marble is thrown as a projectile at an angle...Ch. 4 - 63 * Marbles are exiting a container through a...Ch. 4 - * Robbie Knievel ride On May 20, 1999, Robbie...Ch. 4 - 65. * Daring Darless wishes to cross the Grand...Ch. 4 - * A football punter wants to kick the ball so that...Ch. 4 - 67. * If you shoot a cannonball from the same...Ch. 4 - 68. When you actually perform the experiment...Ch. 4 - 69. * You can shoot an arrow straight up so that...Ch. 4 - 70. * Robin Hood wishes to split an arrow already...Ch. 4 - 71. * Three force diagrams for a car on a road are...Ch. 4 - * A minivan of mass 1560 kg starts at rest and...Ch. 4 - 74. * Emily pulls a 5-kg block across a rough...Ch. 4 - 75. * EST You abruptly push a 1.7-kg book along a...Ch. 4 - 76 ** EST In the situation of Problem 4.75,...Ch. 4 - 78. * Two blocks of masses and hang at the ends...Ch. 4 - 79. * A 3.5-kg object placed on an Inclined plane...Ch. 4 - above the horizontal) is connected by a string...Ch. 4 - above the horizontal) is connected by a string...Ch. 4 - 82 ** You are driving at a reasonable constant...Ch. 4 - 84. * In the situation of Problem 2.71 (Chapter 2...Ch. 4 - 87. * Your friend has a pie on the roof of his...Ch. 4 - * A ledge on a building is 20 m above the ground....Ch. 4 - 89. * You are hired to devise a method to...Ch. 4 - The mass of a spacecraft is about 480 kg. An...Ch. 4 - incline When she reaches the level floor at the...Ch. 4 - * Tell all A sled starts at the top of the hill...Ch. 4 - Professor tests airplane takeoff speed D. A....Ch. 4 - Professor tests airplane takeoff speed D A Wardle,...Ch. 4 - Professor tests airplane takeoff speed D A Wardle,...Ch. 4 - Professor tests airplane takeoff speed D. A....Ch. 4 - Choose the best velocity-versus-time graph below...Ch. 4 - Ski jumping in Vancouver The 2010 Olympic ski...Ch. 4 - Ski jumping in Vancouver The 2010 Olympic ski...Ch. 4 - Ski jumping in Vancouver The 2010 Olympic ski...Ch. 4 - Assume that the skier left the ramp moving...Ch. 4 - Ski jumping in Vancouver The 2010 Olympic ski...
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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 many textbook problems, we ignore certain complications such as friction and drag. The problems contain key words that indicate such a simplification is being used. For example, if a surface is described as slippery, it means that we can ignore friction. Look at the previous chapters problem sets. Find five uses of these key words and explain how to interpret each case.arrow_forwardAn automobile driver traveling down an 8% grade slams on his brakes and skids 30 m before hitting a parked car. A lawyer hires an expert who measures the coefficient of kinetic friction between the tires and road to be k = 0.45. Is the lawyer correct to accuse the driver of exceeding the 25-MPH speed limit? Explain.arrow_forwardWhen you learn to drive, you discover that you need to let up slightly on the brake pedal as you come to a stop or the car will stop with a jerk. Explain this in terms of the relationship between static and kinetic friction.arrow_forward
- Give three important “laws” that characterize frictional interactions between two Solids sliding past one another.arrow_forwardA sled and rider have a total mass of 56.8 kg. They are on a snowy hill. The coefficient of kinetic friction between the sled and the snow is 0.195. The angle of the hills slope measured upward from the horizontal is 19.5. What is the acceleration of the rider? Is the acceleration greater, less than, or equal to your result if a more massive rider uses the same sled on the same hill? Explain.arrow_forwardA car of mass 875 kg is traveling 30.0 m/s when the driver applies the brakes, which lock the wheels. The car skids for 5.60 s in the positive x-direction before coming to rest. (a) What is the cars acceleration? (b) What magnitude force acted on the car during this time? (c) How far did the car travel?arrow_forward
- A car is moving forward slowly and is speeding up. A student claims that the car exerts a force on itself or that the cars engine exerts a force on the car. (a) Argue that this idea cannot be accurate and that friction exerted by the road is the propulsive force on the car. Make your evidence and reasoning as persuasive as possible. (b) Is it static or kinetic friction? Suggestions: Consider a road covered with light gravel. Consider a sharp print of the tire tread on an asphalt road, obtained by coating the tread with dust.arrow_forwardA filled treasure chest of mass m with a long rope tied around its center lies in the middle of a room. Dirk wishes to drag the chest, but there is friction between the chest and the floor with a coefficient of static friction s. If the angle between the rope and the floor is , what is the magnitude of the tension required to just get the chest moving? Express your answer in terms of m, s, , and g.arrow_forwardA block lies motionless on a horizontal tabletop. You apply a force Fapp horizontally to the block, but it does not move. What can you say about the relative sizes and magnitudes of Fapp, the static friction force between the block and the table, and the kinetic friction force between the block and the table?arrow_forward
- Give reasons for the answers to each of the following questions: (a) Clan a normal force be horizontal? (b) Can a normal force be directed vertically downward? (c) Consider a tennis ball in contact with a stationary floor and with nothing else. Can the normal force be different in magnitude from the gravitational force exerted on the ball? (d) Can the force exerted by the floor on the hall be different in magnitude from the force the ball exerts on the floor?arrow_forwardUnreasonable Results (a) Calculate the minimum coefficient of friction needed for a car to negotiate an unbanked 50.0 m radius curve at 30.0 m/ (b) What is unreasonable about the result? (c) Which premises are unreasonable or inconsistent?arrow_forwardA box rests on the back of a truck. The coefficient of static friction between the box and the bed of the truck is 0.800. (a) When the truck accelerates forward, what force accelerates the box? (b) Find the maximum acceleration the truck can have before the box slides.arrow_forward
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