University Physics with Modern Physics (14th Edition)
14th Edition
ISBN: 9780321973610
Author: Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 4, Problem 4.19E
At the surface of Jupiter’s moon Io, the acceleration due to gravity is g = 1.81 m/s2. A watermelon weighs 44.0 N at the surface of the earth, (a) What is the watermelon’s mass on the earth’s surface? (b) What would be its mass and weight on the surface of Io?
Expert Solution & Answer
Learn your wayIncludes step-by-step video
schedule04:10
Students have asked these similar questions
At the surface of Jupiter’s moon Io, the acceleration due to gravity is 1.81 m/s2. If a piece of ice weighs 44.0 N at the surface of the earth, what is its mass (in kg) on the earth’s surface?
On the surface of planet X, a body with a mass of 10.0 kilograms weighs 40.0 newtons. The magnitude of the acceleration due to gravity on the surface of planet X is:
A) 4.0 x 10³ m/s²
B) 4.0 x 10² m/s²
C) 9.8 m/s²
D) 4.0 m/s²
On the surface of the planet Neptune, the acceleration of gravity is 11.15 m/s2. If a meteoroid traveling towards the surface of Neptune has a mass of 7480 kg, then what is the weight of this object when it reaches the surface of Neptune?
7480 N
49,600 N
73,400 N
83,400 N
Chapter 4 Solutions
University Physics with Modern Physics (14th Edition)
Ch. 4.1 - Figure 4.5 shows a force F acting on a crate. With...Ch. 4.2 - In which of the following situations is there zero...Ch. 4.3 - Rank the following situations in order of the...Ch. 4.4 - Prob. 4.4TYUCh. 4.5 - You are driving a car on a country road when a...Ch. 4 - Can a body be in equilibrium when only one force...Ch. 4 - A ball thrown straight up has zero velocity at its...Ch. 4 - A helium balloon hovers in midair, neither...Ch. 4 - When you fly in an airplane at night in smooth...Ch. 4 - If the two ends of a rope in equilibrium are...
Ch. 4 - You tie a brick lo the end of a rope and whirl the...Ch. 4 - When a car stops suddenly, the passengers tend to...Ch. 4 - Some people say that the force of inertia (or...Ch. 4 - A passenger in a moving bus with no windows...Ch. 4 - Suppose you chose the fundamental physical...Ch. 4 - Why is the earth only approximately an inertial...Ch. 4 - Does Newtons second law hold true for an observer...Ch. 4 - Some students refer to the quantity ma as the...Ch. 4 - The acceleration of a falling body is measured in...Ch. 4 - You can play catch with a softball in a bus moving...Ch. 4 - Students sometimes say that the force of gravity...Ch. 4 - Why can it hurt your foot more to kick a big rock...Ch. 4 - Its not the fall that hurts you; its the sudden...Ch. 4 - A person can dive into water from a height of 10 m...Ch. 4 - Why are cars designed to crumple in front and back...Ch. 4 - When a string barely strong enough lifts a heavy...Ch. 4 - A large crate is suspended from the end of a...Ch. 4 - Which feels a greater pull due to the earths...Ch. 4 - Why is it incorrect to say that 1.0 kg equals 2.2...Ch. 4 - A horse is hitched to a wagon. Since the wagon...Ch. 4 - True or false? You exert a push P on an object and...Ch. 4 - A large truck and a small compact car have a...Ch. 4 - When a car comes to a stop on a level highway,...Ch. 4 - A small compact car is pushing a large van that...Ch. 4 - Consider a tug-of-war between two people who pull...Ch. 4 - Boxes A and B are in contact on a horizontal,...Ch. 4 - A manual for student pilots contains this passage:...Ch. 4 - If your hands are wet and no towel is handy, you...Ch. 4 - If you squat down (such as when you examine the...Ch. 4 - When a car is hit from behind, the occupants may...Ch. 4 - In a head-on auto collision, passengers who are...Ch. 4 - In a head-on collision between a compact 1000-kg...Ch. 4 - Suppose you are in a rocket with no windows,...Ch. 4 - Two dogs pull horizontally on ropes attached to a...Ch. 4 - To extricate an SUV stuck in the mud, workmen use...Ch. 4 - BIO Jaw Injury. Due to a jaw injury, a patient...Ch. 4 - A man is dragging a trunk up the loading ramp of a...Ch. 4 - Forces F1 and F2act at a point. The magnitude of...Ch. 4 - An electron (mass = 9.11 1031 kg) leaves one end...Ch. 4 - A 68.5-kg skater moving initially at 2.40 m/s on...Ch. 4 - You walk into an elevator, step onto a scale, and...Ch. 4 - A box rests on a frozen pond, which serves as a...Ch. 4 - A dockworker applies a constant horizontal force...Ch. 4 - A hockey puck with mass 0.160 kg is at rest at the...Ch. 4 - A crate with mass 32.5 kg initially at rest on a...Ch. 4 - A 4.50-kg experimental cart undergoes an...Ch. 4 - A 2.75-kg cat moves in a straight line (the...Ch. 4 - A small 8.00-kg rocket burns fuel that exerts a...Ch. 4 - An astronauts pack weighs 17.5 N when she is on...Ch. 4 - Superman throws a 2400-N boulder at an adversary....Ch. 4 - BIO (a) An ordinary flea has a mass of 210 g. How...Ch. 4 - At the surface of Jupiters moon Io, the...Ch. 4 - A small car of mass 380 kg is pushing a large...Ch. 4 - BIO World-class sprinters can accelerate out of...Ch. 4 - The upward normal force exerted by the floor is...Ch. 4 - Boxes A and B are in contact on a horizontal,...Ch. 4 - A student of mass 45 kg jumps off a high diving...Ch. 4 - Section 4.6 Free-Body Diagrams 4.25Crates A and B...Ch. 4 - You pull horizontally on block B in Fig. F4.26,...Ch. 4 - A ball is hanging from a long siring that is tied...Ch. 4 - CP A .22-caliber rifle bullet traveling at 350 m/s...Ch. 4 - A chair of mass 12.0 kg is sitting on the...Ch. 4 - A large box containing your new computer sits on...Ch. 4 - CP A 5.60-kg bucket of water is accelerated upward...Ch. 4 - CP You have just landed on Planet X. You release a...Ch. 4 - Two adults and a child want to push a wheeled cart...Ch. 4 - CP An oil tankers engines have broken down, and...Ch. 4 - CP BIO A Standing Vertical Jump. Basketball player...Ch. 4 - CP An advertisement claims that a particular...Ch. 4 - BIO Human Biomechanics. The fastest pitched...Ch. 4 - BIO Human Biomechanics. The fastest served tennis...Ch. 4 - Two crates, one with mass 4.00 kg and the other...Ch. 4 - CP Two blocks connected by a light horizontal rope...Ch. 4 - CALC To study damage to aircraft that collide with...Ch. 4 - CP A 6.50-kg instrument is hanging by a vertical...Ch. 4 - BIO Insect Dynamics. The froghopper (Philaenus...Ch. 4 - A loaded elevator with very worn cables has a...Ch. 4 - CP After an annual checkup, you leave your...Ch. 4 - CP A nail in a pine board stops a 4.9-N hammer...Ch. 4 - CP Jumping to the Ground. A 75.0-kg man steps off...Ch. 4 - The two blocks in Fig. P4.48 are connected by a...Ch. 4 - CP Boxes A and B are connected to each end of a...Ch. 4 - CP Extraterrestrial Physics. You have landed on an...Ch. 4 - CP CALC A mysterious rocket-propelled object of...Ch. 4 - CALC The position of a training helicopter (weight...Ch. 4 - DATA The table gives automobile performance data...Ch. 4 - DATA An 8.00-kg box sits on a level floor. You...Ch. 4 - DATA You are a Starfleet captain going boldly...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.56CPCh. 4 - BIO FORCES ON A DANCER'S BODY. Dancers experience...Ch. 4 - BIO FORCES ON A DANCERS BODY. Dancers experience...Ch. 4 - BIO FORCES ON A DANCER'S BODY. Dancers experience...Ch. 4 - The forces on a dancer can be measured directly...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
22.(I) A car slows down from 28 m/s to rest in a distance of 88m. What was its acceleration, assumed constant?
...
Physics: Principles with Applications
9. A cannon tilted upward at 30º fires a cannonball with a speed of 100 m/s. At that instant, what is the compo...
College Physics: A Strategic Approach (4th Edition)
* BIO Blood flow In artery Blood flows at an average speed of 0.40 m/s in a horizontal artery of radius 1.0 cm....
College Physics
3. What is free-fall, and why does it make you weightless? Briefly describe why astronauts are weightless in th...
The Cosmic Perspective (8th Edition)
Some stove tops are smooth ceramic for easy cleaning. If the ceramic is 0.600 cm thick and heat conduction occu...
University Physics Volume 2
A block of mass m undergoes a one-dimensional elastic collision with a block of mass M initially at rest. If bo...
Essential University Physics (3rd Edition)
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
- Find the magnitude of the gravitational force (in N) between a planet with mass 6.75 * 10 ^ 24 * kg and its moon, with mass 2.55 * 10 ^ 22 * kg if the average distance between 2.60 * 10 ^8 m. What is the moon's acceleration (in m /s ^ 2) toward the planet? What is the planet's acceleration (in m/s^ 2 ) toward the moon?arrow_forwardIf an object weighs 3 x 105 N on the surface of the earth, what would its weight be at an altitude of 400 km above the surface of the earth?arrow_forwardAn object weights 7840 N (Newton) on a planet where the acceleration due to gravity is twenty (20) times greater than that of Earth. What would be the mass of this object? A.) 80 kg B.) 40 kg C.) 19.6 kg D.) 98 kgarrow_forward
- An object with a mass of 100 kg measured on Earth is taken to the Mars. What is the mass of the object on the Mars’s surface if the acceleration due to gravity on Mars is two-fifth of that on Earth? 1. 80 kg 2. 50kg 3. 40kg 4. 100kgarrow_forwardIf an object weighs 981 N on earth, what would be the mass of the object if it was taken to the moon where the local acceleration due to gravity is 1.620 m/s?arrow_forwardThe weight of a mass on Mercury, where the acceleration due to gravity is 3.61 m/s2, is 1235 N. What would be the weight of the same mass on the Moon, where the acceleration due to gravity is 1.60 m/s2?arrow_forward
- The force due to gravity on an object with mass $m$ at a height $h$ above the surface of the earth is\[F-\frac{m g R^{2}}{(R+h)^{2}}\]where $R$ is the radius of the earth and $g$ is the acceleration due to gravity.(a) Express $F$ as a series in powers of $h / R$.arrow_forwardTwo spherical objects having weights W1 = 2200N and W2 = 3600N are separated by a distance of 22.4m between their centers of mass. The force of gravitational attraction between these two objects is________Narrow_forwardIf an object at the surface of the Earth has a weight W, what would be the weight of the object if it was transported to the surface of a planet that is one-sixth the mass of Earth and has a radius one third that of Earth?arrow_forward
- The gravity of Jupiter is about 3 times what it is on Earth. If an object’s mass is 180 kg on Earth, what would its mass be on Jupiter? a. 60 kg b. 90 kg c. 180 kg d. 540 kgarrow_forwardFind the resultant force on (a) the mass m1 = 0.197 kg and (b) the mass m2 = 0.106 kg in the figure below (the masses are isolated from the earth). Fm1 =________N Fm2 =________Narrow_forwardAn asteroid has a mass of m = 8.5 × 1012 kg and also has two rocket thrusters attached to it. One thruster supplies a force with x- and y- componentsF 1 = (8.0 × 107, 7.0 × 107) N while the other supplies a force with x- and y-components F 2 = (4.0 × 107, −2.0 × 107) N. (You may ignore the mass of the rocket thrusters and their fuel.) 1. What is the magnitude of the acceleration of the asteroid produced by the thrusters and in which direction does it act? 2. If the constant force acts in the same direction as the asteroids motion. calculate the time required to change the speed of the asteroid by 1.0ms-1 and therefore show that this is about 18 hours.arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Glencoe Physics: Principles and Problems, Student...PhysicsISBN:9780078807213Author:Paul W. ZitzewitzPublisher:Glencoe/McGraw-HillCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage Learning
Glencoe Physics: Principles and Problems, Student...
Physics
ISBN:9780078807213
Author:Paul W. Zitzewitz
Publisher:Glencoe/McGraw-Hill
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781285737027
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Gravitational Force (Physics Animation); Author: EarthPen;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxp1Z91S5uQ;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY