COLLEGE PHYSICS,V.1-W/ENH.WEBASSIGN
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781305411906
Author: SERWAY
Publisher: CENGAGE L
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Chapter 5, Problem 5WUE
To determine
The velocity of the block in each case.
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Chapter 5 Solutions
COLLEGE PHYSICS,V.1-W/ENH.WEBASSIGN
Ch. 5.1 - In Figure 5.5 (a)-(d), a block moves to the right...Ch. 5.3 - Three identical halls are thrown from the top of a...Ch. 5.3 - Bob, of mass m, drops from a tree limb at the same...Ch. 5.5 - Prob. 5.4QQCh. 5 - Physics Review A crane lifts a loud of bricks of...Ch. 5 - Physics Review A crate of mass 20.0 kg rest on a...Ch. 5 - Calculate the work done by an applied force of...Ch. 5 - Prob. 4WUECh. 5 - Prob. 5WUECh. 5 - A 4.00-kg crate Marling at rest slides dawn a...
Ch. 5 - A skier leaves a ski jump at 15.0 m/s at some...Ch. 5 - A block of mass 3.00 kg is placed against a...Ch. 5 - What average mechanical power must a 70.0-kg...Ch. 5 - A puck of mass 0.170 kg slides across ice in the...Ch. 5 - Consider a tug-of-war as in Figure CQ5.1, in which...Ch. 5 - During a stress test of the cardiovascular system,...Ch. 5 - (a) If the height of a playground slide is kept...Ch. 5 - (a) Can the kinetic energy of a system be...Ch. 5 - Roads going up mountains are formed into...Ch. 5 - A bowling ball is suspended from the ceiling of a...Ch. 5 - As a simple pendulum swings back and forth, the...Ch. 5 - Discuss whether any work is being done by each of...Ch. 5 - When a punter kicks a football, is he doing any...Ch. 5 - The driver of a car slams on her brakes to avoid...Ch. 5 - A weight is connected to a spring that is...Ch. 5 - In most situations we have encountered in this...Ch. 5 - Suppose you are reshelving books in a library. As...Ch. 5 - The feet of a standing person of mass m exert a...Ch. 5 - An Earth satellite is in a circular orbit at an...Ch. 5 - Mark and David are loading identical cement blocks...Ch. 5 - If the speed of a particle is doubled, what...Ch. 5 - A certain truck has twice the mass of a car. Both...Ch. 5 - If the net work done on a particle is zero, which...Ch. 5 - A car accelerates uniformly from rest. Ignoring...Ch. 5 - A weight lifter lifts a 350-N set of weights from...Ch. 5 - In 1990 Walter Arfeuille of Belgium lifted a...Ch. 5 - Prob. 3PCh. 5 - a shopper in a supermarket pushes a cart with a...Ch. 5 - Starting from rest, a 5.00-kg block slides 2.50 m...Ch. 5 - A horizontal force of 150 N is used to push a...Ch. 5 - A sledge loaded with bricks has a total mass of...Ch. 5 - A block of mass m = 2.50 kg is pushed a distance d...Ch. 5 - A mechanic pushes a 2.50 103-kg car from rest to...Ch. 5 - A 7.00-kg bowling ball moves at 3.00 m/s. How fast...Ch. 5 - A 65.0-kg runner has a speed of 5.20 m/s at one...Ch. 5 - A worker pushing a 35.0-kg wooden crate at a...Ch. 5 - A 70-kg base runner begins his slide into second...Ch. 5 - A running 62-kg cheetah has a top speed of 32 m/s....Ch. 5 - A 7.80-g bullet moving at 575 m/s penetrates a...Ch. 5 - A 0.60-kg particle has a speed of 2.0 m/s at point...Ch. 5 - A large cruise ship of mass 6.50 107 kg has a...Ch. 5 - A man pushing a crate of mass m = 92.0 kg at a...Ch. 5 - A 0.20-kg stone is held 1.3 m above the top edge...Ch. 5 - When a 2.50-kg object is hung vertically on a...Ch. 5 - In a control system, an accelerometer consists of...Ch. 5 - A 60.0-kg athlete leaps straight up into the air...Ch. 5 - A 2.10 103-kg pile driver is used to drive a...Ch. 5 - Two blocks are connected by a light string that...Ch. 5 - A daredevil on a motorcycle leaves the end of a...Ch. 5 - Truck suspensions often have helper springs dial...Ch. 5 - The chin-up is one exercise that can be used to...Ch. 5 - A flea is able to jump about 0.5 m. It has been...Ch. 5 - A 50.0-kg projectile is fired at an angle of 30.0...Ch. 5 - A projectile of mass m is fired horizontally with...Ch. 5 - A horizontal spring attached to a wall has a force...Ch. 5 - A 50.-kg pole vaulter running at 10. m/s vaults...Ch. 5 - A child and a sled with a combined mass of 50.0 kg...Ch. 5 - Hookes law describes a certain light spring of...Ch. 5 - A 0.250-kg block along a horizontal track has a...Ch. 5 - A block of mass m = 5.00 kg is released from rest...Ch. 5 - Tarzan savings on a 30.0-m-long vine initially...Ch. 5 - Two blocks are connected by a light string that...Ch. 5 - The launching mechanism of a toy gun consists of a...Ch. 5 - (a) A block with a mass m is pulled along a...Ch. 5 - (a) A child slides down a water slide at an...Ch. 5 - An airplane of mass 1.50 104 kg is moving at 60.0...Ch. 5 - The system shown in Figure P5.43 is used to lift...Ch. 5 - A 25.0-kg child on a 2.00-m-long swing is released...Ch. 5 - A 2.1 103-kg car starts from rest at the top of a...Ch. 5 - A child of mass m starts from rest and slides...Ch. 5 - A skier starts from rest at the top of a hill that...Ch. 5 - In a circus performance, a monkey is strapped to a...Ch. 5 - An 80.0-kg skydiver jumps out of a balloon at an...Ch. 5 - Q A skier of mass 70.0 kg is pulled up a slope by...Ch. 5 - A 3.50-kN piano is lilted by three workers at...Ch. 5 - While running, a person dissipates about 0.60 J of...Ch. 5 - The electric motor of a model train accelerates...Ch. 5 - When an automobile moves with constant speed down...Ch. 5 - Prob. 55PCh. 5 - Prob. 56PCh. 5 - A 1.50 103-kg car starts from rest and...Ch. 5 - A 6.50 102-kg elevator starts from rest and moves...Ch. 5 - The force acting on a particle varies as in Figure...Ch. 5 - An object of mass 3.00 kg is subject to a force Fx...Ch. 5 - The force acting on an object is given by Fx = (8x...Ch. 5 - An outfielder throws a 0.150-kg baseball at a...Ch. 5 - A person doing a chin-up weighs 700 N, exclusive...Ch. 5 - A boy starts at rest and slides down a...Ch. 5 - A roller-coaster car of mass 1.50 103 kg is...Ch. 5 - A ball of mass m = 1.80 kg is released from rest...Ch. 5 - An archer pulls her bowstring back 0.400 m by...Ch. 5 - A block of mass 12.0 kg slides from rest down a...Ch. 5 - (a) A 75-kg man steps out a window and falls (from...Ch. 5 - A toy gun uses a spring to project a 5.3-g soft...Ch. 5 - Two objects (m1 = 5.00 kg and m2 = 3.00 kg) are...Ch. 5 - In a needle biopsy, a narrow strip of tissue is...Ch. 5 - A 2.00 102-g particle is released from rest at...Ch. 5 - The particle described in Problem 71 (Fig. P5.71)...Ch. 5 - A light spring with spring constant 1.20 103 N/m...Ch. 5 - Prob. 76APCh. 5 - In terms of saving energy, bicycling and walking...Ch. 5 - Energy is conventionally measured in Calories as...Ch. 5 - A ski jumper starts from rest 50.0 m above the...Ch. 5 - A 5.0-kg block is pushed 3.0 m up a vertical wall...Ch. 5 - A childs pogo slick (Fig. P5.77) stores energy in...Ch. 5 - A hummingbird is able to hover because, as the...Ch. 5 - In the dangerous sport of bungee jumping, a daring...Ch. 5 - The masses of the javelin, discus, and shot are...Ch. 5 - A truck travels uphill with constant velocity on a...Ch. 5 - A daredevil wishes to bungee-jump from a hot-air...Ch. 5 - Prob. 87APCh. 5 - An object of mass m is suspended from the top of a...Ch. 5 - Three objects with masses m1 = 5.00 kg, m2 = 10.0...Ch. 5 - Prob. 90APCh. 5 - Prob. 91APCh. 5 - Two blocks, A and B (with mass 50.0 kg and 1.00 ...
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- A child of mass m starts from rest and slides without friction from a height h along a curved waterslide (Fig. P5.46). She is launched from a height h/5 into the pool. (a) Is mechanical energy conserved? Why? (b) Give the gravitational potential energy associated with the child and her kinetic energy in terms of mgh at the following positions: the top of the waterslide, the launching point, and the point where she lands in the pool. (c) Determine her initial speed V0 at the launch point in terms of g and h. (d) Determine her maximum airborne height ymax in terms of h, g, and the horizontal speed at that height, v0x. (e) Use the x-component of the answer to part (c) to eliminate from the answer to part (d), giving the height ymax in terms of g, h, and the launch angle . (f) Would your answers be the same if the waterslide were not frictionless? Explain. Figure P5.46arrow_forwardTwo blocks, A and B (with mass 50.0 kg and 1.00 102 kg, respectively), are connected by a string, as shown in Figure P5.86. The pulley is frictionless and of negligible mass. The coefficient of kinetic friction between block A and the incline is k = 0.250. Determine the change in the kinetic energy of block A as it moves from to , a distance of 20.0 m up the incline (and block B drops downward a distance of 20.0 m) if the system starts from rest. Figure P5.86arrow_forwardIn the Back to the Future movies (https://openstaxcollege.org/l/2lbactofutclip), a DeLorean car of mass 1230 kg travels at 88 miles per hour to venture back to the future. (a) What is the kinetic energy of the DeLorean? (b) What spring constant would be needed to stop this DeLorean in a distance of 0.1m?arrow_forward
- As a young man, Tarzan climbed up a vine to reach his tree house. As he got older, he decided to build and use a staircase instead. Since the work of the gravitational force mg is path Independent, what did the King of the Apes gain in using stairs?arrow_forward(a) Sketch a graph of the potential energy function U(x)=kx2/2+Aex2 where k , A, and are constants. (b) What is the force corresponding to this potential energy? (c) Suppose a particle of mass in moving with this potential energy has a velocity v when its position is x = . Show that the particle does not pass 2+2 through the origin unless Amv2=k22(1e a 2 ) .arrow_forwardThe system shown in Figure P5.43 is used to lift an object of mass m = 76.0 kg. A constant downward force of magnitude F is applied to the loose end of the rope such that the hanging object moves upward at constant speed. Neglecting the masses of the rope and pulleys, find (a) the required value of F, (b) the tensions T1, T2, and T3, and (c) the work done by the applied force in raising the object a distance of 1.80 m. Figure P5.43arrow_forward
- A particle moves in a medium under the influence of a retarding force equal to mk(υ3+ a2υ), where k and a are constants. Show that for any value of the initial speed the particle will never move a distance greater than π/2kaand that the particle comes to rest only for t → ∞.arrow_forwardA block of mass m = 5.00 kg is released from rest from point and slides on the frictionless track shown in Figure P5.36. Determine (a) the blocks speed at points and and (b) the net work done by the gravitational force on the block as it moves from point from to . Figure P5.36arrow_forwardThe system shown in Figure P5.43 is used to lift an object of mass m = 76.0 kg. A constant downward force of magnitude F is applied to the loose end of the rope such that the hanging object moves upward at constant speed. Neglecting the masses of the rope and pulleys, find (a) the required value of F, (b) the tensions T1, T2, and T3, and (c) the work done by the applied force in raising the object a distance of 1.80 m. Figure P5.43arrow_forward
- A block of mass m = 5.00 kg is released from rest from point and slides on the frictionless track shown in Figure P5.36. Determine (a) the blocks speed at points and and (b) the net work done by the gravitational force on the block as it moves from point from to . Figure P5.36arrow_forwardA 4.0-kg particle moving along the x -axis is acted upon by the force whose functional form appears below. The velocity of the particle at x = 0 is v = 6.0 m/s. Find the particle’s speed at x=(a)2.0m, 2.0 (b)4.0 m. (c) 10.0m, (d) Does the particle turn around at some point and head back toward the origin? (e) Repeat part (d) if v = 2.0 m/s at x = 0.arrow_forwardA ball of mass m = 1.80 kg is released from rest at a height h = 65.0 cm above a light vertical spring of force constant k as in Figure P5.64a. The ball strikes the top of the spring and compresses it a distance d = 9.00 cm as in Figure P5.64b. Neglecting any energy losses during the collision, find (a) the speed of the hall just as it touches the spring and (b) the force constant of the spring.arrow_forward
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Mechanical work done (GCSE Physics); Author: Dr de Bruin's Classroom;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OapgRhYDMvw;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY