COLLEGE PHYSICS:VOL.1
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9780134862897
Author: ETKINA
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 4, Problem 9MCQ
You hold a block on a horizontal, frictionless surface. It is connected by a string that passes over a pulley to a vertically hanging block (a modified Atwood machine). What is the magnitude of the acceleration of the hanging object after you release the block on the horizontal surface?
a. Less than g
b. More than g
c. Equal to g
d. Any of the answers a-c, depending on the masses of the blocks.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
different.
e. There is not enough information to draw any conclusions regarding distance and
displacement.
7. If a car is travelling, north with a constant speed of 25.0 m/s, what is the net force that
acts on the car?
a. EF = 9.80 N
b. ΣF-0
C. EF =-9.80 N
d. EF = 25.O N
e. We cannot draw any conclusions about the force because we do not know the
mass of the car.
8. If a fly collides with a windshield of a fast-moving car, which experiences impact force
with a larger magnitude?
a. The fly.
b. The car.
C. Both experience the same force.
d. Depends whether the car isla Ford or a Holden.
e. None of the above.
Page 13 of 16
Assessment 3 of Semester 2, 2021
PHYS0004 Fundamentals of Physics
9. Select the most true statement from the following:
a. Joule (J) is a unit of work.
b. Joule (J) is a unit of energy.
c. Joule (J) is a unit of power.
1.If we know an object is moving at constant velocity, we may assume: a. the net force acting on the object is zero.b. there are no forces acting on the object.c. the object is accelerating.d. the object is losing mass.2.Two forces act on a 6.00-kg object. One of the forces is 10.0 N. If the object accelerates at 2.00 m/s2, what is the greatest possible magnitude of the other force?a. 1.0Nb. 2.0Nc. 22.0 N d. 34.0 N3.If we know that a nonzero net force is acting on an object, which of the following must we assume regarding the object's condition? The object is:a. at rest.b. moving with a constant velocity.c. being accelerated. d. losing mass.4.A karate master strikes a board with an initial velocity of 10.0 m/s, decreasing to 1.0 m/s as his hand passes through the board. If the time of contact with the board is 0.002 0 s, and the mass of the coordinated hand and arm is 1.0 kg, what is the force exerted on the board?a. 1000Nb. 1800N c. 2700N d. 4500N5.Rupel pushes a box 5.00 m by…
Chapter 4 Solutions
COLLEGE PHYSICS:VOL.1
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...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
Does inductance depend on current, frequency, or both? What about inductive reactance?
College Physics
A thin plate has a round hole whose diameter in its rest frame is D. The plate is parallel to the ground and mo...
Modern Physics
During which dates does the mystery planet appear to move with normal, prograde, motion, as compared to the bac...
Lecture- Tutorials for Introductory Astronomy
(a) What is the average useful power output of a person who does 6.00106J of useful work in 8.00 h? (b) Working...
University Physics Volume 1
What class of motion, natural or violent, did Aristotle attribute to motion of the Moon?
Conceptual Physics (12th Edition)
9.49 About what axis will a uniform, balsa-wood sphere have the same moment of inertia as does a thin-walled, h...
University Physics (14th 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
- (a) A cat with a mass of 850 kg in moving to the right with a constant speed of 1.44 m/s. What is the total force on the cat ? (b) What is the total force on the cat if it is moving to the left?arrow_forwardAn object of mass m1 hangs from a string that passes over a very light fixed pulley P1 as shown in Figure P5.25. The string connects to a second very light pulley P2. A second string passes around this pulley with one end attached to a wall and the other to an object of mass m2 on a frictionless, horizontal table. (a) If a1 and a2 are the accelerations of m1 and m2, respectively, what is the relation between these accelerations? Find expressions for (b) the tensions in the strings and (c) the accelerations a1 and a2 in terms of the masses m1 and m2 and g. Figure P5.25arrow_forwardA hockey stick pushes a 0.160-kg puck with constant force across the frictionless surface of an ice rink. During this motion, the pucks velocity changes from 4.00 m/s to (6.00 + 12.00) m/s in 4.00 s. a. What are the scalar components of the force acting on the puck? b. What is the magnitude of the force acting on the puck?arrow_forward
- A soft tennis ball is dropped onto a hard floor from a height of 1.50 m and rebounds to a height of 1.10 m. (a) Calculate its velocity just before it strikes the floor. (b) Calculate its velocity just after it leaves the floor on its way back up. (c) Calculate its acceleration during contact with the floor if that contact lasts (3.50103s). (d) How much did the ball compress during its collision with the floor, assuming the floor is absolutely rigid?arrow_forward(a) An elevator of mass m moving upward has two forces acting on it: the upward force of tension in the cable and the downward force due to gravity. When the elevator is accelerating upward, which is greater. T or w? (b) When the elevator is moving at a constant velocity upward, which is greater. T or w2 (c) When the elevator is moving upward, but the acceleration is downward, which is greater. T or w? (d) Let the elevator have a mass of 1500 kg and an upward acceleration of 2.5 m/s2. Find T. Is your answer consistent with the answer to part (a)? (e) The elevator of part (d) now moves with a constant upward velocity of 10 m/s. Find T. Is your answer consistent with your answer to part (b)? (f) Having initially moved upward with a constant velocity, the elevator begins to accelerate downward at 1.50 m/s2. Find T Is your answer consistent with your answer to part (c)?arrow_forwardReview. The gravitational force exerted on a baseball is 2.21 N down. A pitcher throws the ball horizontally with velocity 18.0 m/s by uniformly accelerating it along a straight horizontal line for a time interval of 170 ms. The ball starts from rest, (a) Through what distance does it move before its release? (b) What are the magnitude and direction of the force the pitcher exerts on the hall?arrow_forward
- Review. The gravitational force exerted on a baseball is Fgj. A pitcher throws the ball with velocity vi by uniformly accelerating it along a straight horizontal line for a time interval of t = t 0 = t. (a) Starting from rest, through what distance does the hall move before its release? (b) What force does the pitcher exert on the hall?arrow_forwardA crate of mass 45.0 kg is being transported on the flatbed of a pickup truck. The coefficient of static friction between the crate and the trucks flatbed is 0.350, and the coefficient of kinetic friction is 0.320. (a) The truck accelerates forward on level ground. What is the maximum acceleration the truck can have so that the crate does not slide relative to the trucks flatbed? (b) The truck barely exceeds this acceleration and then moves with constant acceleration, with the crate sliding along its bed. What is the acceleration of the crate relative to the ground?arrow_forwardA soft tennis ball is dropped onto a hard floor from a height of 1.50 m and rebounds to a height of 1.10 m. (a) Calculate its velocity just before it strikes the floor. (b) Calculate its velocity just after It leaves the floor on its way back up. (c) Calculate its acceleration during contact with the floor if that contact lasts 3.50 ms (3.50103s) (d) How much did the ball compress during its collision with the floor, assuming the floor is absolutely rigid?arrow_forward
- A 2.50-kg fireworks shell is fired straight up from a mortar and reaches a height of 110.0 m. (a) Neglecting air resistance (a poor assumption, but we will make it for this example), calculate the shell’s velocity when it leaves the mortar. (b) The mortar itself is a tube 0.450 m long. Calculate the average acceleration of the shell in the tube as It goes from zero to the velocity found in (a). (c) What is the average force on the shell in the mortar? Express your answer in newtons and as a ratio to the weight of the shell.arrow_forwardA small piece of Styrofoam packing material is dropped from a height of 2.00 m above the ground. Until it reaches terminal speed, the magnitude of its acceleration is given by a = g Bv. After falling 0.500 m, the Styrofoam effectively reaches terminal speed and then takes 5.00 s more to reach the ground. (a) What is the value of the constant B? (b) What is the acceleration at t = 0? (c) What is the acceleration when the speed is 0.150 m/s?arrow_forwardA block of ice (m = 15.0 kg) with an attached rope is at rest on a frictionless surface. You pull the block with a horizontal force of 95.0 N for 1.54 s. a. Determine the magnitude of each force acting on the block of ice while you are pulling. b. With what speed is the ice moving after you are finished pulling? Repeat Problem 71, but this time you pull on the block at an angle of 20.0.arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology ...PhysicsISBN:9781305116399Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern ...PhysicsISBN:9781337553292Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage Learning
- University Physics Volume 1PhysicsISBN:9781938168277Author:William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff SannyPublisher:OpenStax - Rice UniversityCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781305952300Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage Learning
Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology ...
Physics
ISBN:9781305116399
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern ...
Physics
ISBN:9781337553292
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
University Physics Volume 1
Physics
ISBN:9781938168277
Author:William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff Sanny
Publisher:OpenStax - Rice University
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781285737027
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781305952300
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Newton's Third Law of Motion: Action and Reaction; Author: Professor Dave explains;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y61_VPKH2B4;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY