COLLEGE PHYS. VOL 1 LLF W/MODMAST >IC<
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781323149454
Author: YOUNG
Publisher: PEARSON C
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Textbook Question
Chapter 8, Problem 28P
A hockey puck B rests on frictionless, level ice and is struck by a second puck A, which was originally traveling at 40.0 m/s and which is deflected 30.0° from its original direction. (See Figure 8.40) Puck B acquires a velocity at a 45.0° angle to the original direction of A. The pucks have the same mass. (a) Compute the speed of each puck after the collision. (b) What fraction of the original kinetic energy of puck A dissipates during the collision?
Figure 8.40
Problem 28.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 8 Solutions
COLLEGE PHYS. VOL 1 LLF W/MODMAST >IC<
Ch. 8 - The objects shown in Figure 8.31 move together....Ch. 8 - Gliders A and B are headed directly toward each...Ch. 8 - Example 8.3 and some of the problems in this...Ch. 8 - Is the momentum of a satellite in a circular orbit...Ch. 8 - Prob. 5CQCh. 8 - A woman stands in the middle of a perfectly...Ch. 8 - (a) If the momentum of a single object is equal to...Ch. 8 - (a) When a large car collides with a small car,...Ch. 8 - When rain falls from the sky, what becomes of the...Ch. 8 - In a zero-gravity environment, can a...
Ch. 8 - A machine gun is fired at a steel plate. Is the...Ch. 8 - At the highest point in its parabolic trajectory,...Ch. 8 - A small car collides head-on with a large SUV....Ch. 8 - In which of the following collisions would you...Ch. 8 - A rifle of mass M is initially at rest, but is...Ch. 8 - Two carts, one twice as heavy as the other, are at...Ch. 8 - Two masses, M and 5M, are at rest on a horizontal...Ch. 8 - A glider airplane is coasting horizontally when a...Ch. 8 - Which of the following statements is true for an...Ch. 8 - Which of the following statements is true for an...Ch. 8 - Cart A, of mass 1 kg, is initially moving to the...Ch. 8 - Two lumps of day having equal masses and speeds,...Ch. 8 - A heavy rifle initially at rest fires a light...Ch. 8 - You drop an egg from rest with no air resistance....Ch. 8 - For each case in Figure 8.33, the system consists...Ch. 8 - For each case in Figure 8.34, the system consists...Ch. 8 - Three objects A, B, and C are moving as shown in...Ch. 8 - A 2646 lb car is moving on the freeway at 68 mph....Ch. 8 - The speed of the fastest-pitched baseball was 45...Ch. 8 - Cart A has a mass of 5 kg and is moving in the +x...Ch. 8 - The magnitude of the momentum of a cat is . What...Ch. 8 - Two figure skaters, one weighing 625 N and the...Ch. 8 - Recoil speed of the earth. In principle, any time...Ch. 8 - On a frictionless air track, a 0.150 kg glider...Ch. 8 - You are standing on a sheet of ice that covers the...Ch. 8 - On a frictionless, horizontal air table, puck A...Ch. 8 - Block A in Figure 8.36 has mass 1.00 kg, and block...Ch. 8 - A 750 kg car is stalled on an icy road during a...Ch. 8 - You (mass 55 kg) are riding your frictionless...Ch. 8 - A 4.25 g bullet traveling horizontally with a...Ch. 8 - A ball with a mass of 0.600 kg is initially at...Ch. 8 - Combining conservation laws. A 5.00 kg chunk of...Ch. 8 - Combining conservation laws. A 15.0 kg block is...Ch. 8 - Three Identical boxcars are coupled together and...Ch. 8 - On a highly polished, essentially frictionless...Ch. 8 - A 2 kg block is moving at 5 m/s along a...Ch. 8 - On a very muddy football field, a 110 kg...Ch. 8 - A 5.00 g bullet is fired horizontally into a 1.20...Ch. 8 - A hungry 11.5 kg predator fish is coasting from...Ch. 8 - Bird defense. To protect their young in the nest,...Ch. 8 - Accident analysis. Two cars collide at an...Ch. 8 - A hockey puck B rests on frictionless, level ice...Ch. 8 - A 0.300 kg glider is moving to the right on a...Ch. 8 - On a cold winter day, a penny (mass 2.50 g) and a...Ch. 8 - On an air track, a 400.0 g glider moving to the...Ch. 8 - Blocks A (mass 2.00 kg) and B (mass 10.00 kg) move...Ch. 8 - A 2 kg block is moving at a speed of 10 m/s and...Ch. 8 - A catcher catches a 145 g baseball traveling...Ch. 8 - A block of ice with a mass of 2.50 kg is moving on...Ch. 8 - Biomechanics. The mass of a regulation tennis ball...Ch. 8 - To warm up for a match, a tennis player hits the...Ch. 8 - A 150 g baseball is hit toward the left by a bat....Ch. 8 - Your little sister (mass 25.0 kg) is sitting in...Ch. 8 - A 270 caliber hunting rifle fires an 8.5 g bullet,...Ch. 8 - Calculate the location of the center of mass of...Ch. 8 - Prob. 42PCh. 8 - Three odd-shaped blocks of chocolate have the...Ch. 8 - A 2 kg stone is dropped from a 50-m-tall building....Ch. 8 - Prob. 45PCh. 8 - A 1200 kg station wagon is moving along a straight...Ch. 8 - Walking in a boat. A 45.0 kg woman stands up in a...Ch. 8 - A small rocket burns 0.0500 kg of fuel per second,...Ch. 8 - A rocket is fired in deep space, where gravity is...Ch. 8 - A rocket is fired in deep space, where gravity is...Ch. 8 - A 70 kg astronaut floating in space in a 110 kg...Ch. 8 - In 1.00 second an automatic paintball gun can fire...Ch. 8 - In a volcanic eruption, a 2400-kg boulder is...Ch. 8 - A 0.4 kg stone is thrown horizontally at a speed...Ch. 8 - A stone with a mass of 0.100 kg rests on a...Ch. 8 - A steel ball with a mass of 40.0 g is dropped from...Ch. 8 - A movie stuntman (mass 80.0 kg) stands on a window...Ch. 8 - Tennis, anyone? Tennis players sometimes leap into...Ch. 8 - A mass m is placed at the rim of a frictionless...Ch. 8 - Two identical 1.50 kg masses are pressed against...Ch. 8 - A rifle bullet with mass 8.00 g strikes and embeds...Ch. 8 - A 5.00 g bullet traveling horizontally at 450 m/s...Ch. 8 - The objects in Figure 8.49 are constructed of...Ch. 8 - Changing mass. A railroad hopper car filled with...Ch. 8 - Forensic science. Forensic scientists can measure...Ch. 8 - A 2.0 kg steel sphere is hanging from a hook by a...Ch. 8 - A blue puck with mass 0.0400 kg, sliding with a...Ch. 8 - The structure of the atom. During 19101911, Sir...Ch. 8 - Rocket failure! Just as it has reached an upward...Ch. 8 - In a common physics demonstration, two identical...Ch. 8 - A 7.0 kg shell at rest explodes Into two...Ch. 8 - A 15.0 g acorn falls from rest from the top of a...Ch. 8 - Accident analysts. A 1500 kg sedan goes through a...Ch. 8 - A block of clay is suspended as part of a...Ch. 8 - Momentum and the archerfish. Archerfish are...Ch. 8 - Momentum and the archerfish. Archerfish are...Ch. 8 - Momentum and the archerfish. Archerfish are...Ch. 8 - BIO Momentum and the archerfish. Archerfish are...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
Explain all answers clearly, using complete sentence and proper essay structure if needed. An asterisk (*) desi...
Cosmic Perspective Fundamentals
1. When is energy most evident?
Conceptual Physics (12th Edition)
5. Does the medium in which a wave travels move with the wave?
Conceptual Physical Science (6th Edition)
Q3.12 In uniform circular motion, the acceleration is perpendicular to the velocity at every instant. Is this t...
University Physics (14th Edition)
What is the volume of one mole of air, at room temperature and 1 atm pressure?
An Introduction to Thermal Physics
The pV-diagram of the Carnot cycle.
Sears And Zemansky's University Physics With Modern Physics
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
- Sand from a stationary hopper falls onto a moving conveyor belt at the rate of 5.00 kg/s as shown in Figure P8.64. The conveyor belt is supported by frictionless rollers and moves at a constant speed of v = 0.750 m/s under the action of a constant horizontal external force Fext supplied by the motor that drives the belt. Find (a) the sands rate of change of momentum in the horizontal direction, (b) the force of friction exerted by the belt on the sand, (c) the external force Fext, (d) the work done by Fext in 1 s, and (e) the kinetic energy acquired by the falling sand each second due to the change in its horizontal motion. (f) Why are the answers to parts (d) and (e) different? Figure P8.64arrow_forwardInitially, ball 1 rests on an incline of height h, and ball 2 rests on an incline of height h/2 as shown in Figure P11.40. They are released from rest simultaneously and collide in the trough of the track. If m2 = 4 m1 and the collision is elastic, find an expression for the velocity of each ball immediately after the collision. FIGURE P11.40 Problems 40 and 41.arrow_forwardA head-on, elastic collision occurs between two billiard balls of equal mass. If a red ball is traveling to the right with speed v and a blue ball is traveling to the left with speed 3v before the collision, what statement is true concerning their velocities subsequent to the collision? Neglect any effects of spin. (a) The red ball travels to the left with speed v, while the blue ball travels to the right with speed 3v. (b) The red ball travels to the left with speed v, while the blue ball continues to move to the left with a speed 2v. (c) The red ball travels to the left with speed 3v, while the blue ball travels to the right with speed v. (d) Their final velocities cannot be determined because momentum is not conserved in the collision. (e) The velocities cannot be determined without knowing the mass of each ball.arrow_forward
- Assume the pucks in Figure P11.66 stick together after theircollision at the origin. Puck 2 has four times the mass of puck 1 (m2 = 4m1). Initially, puck 1s speed is three times puck 2s speed (v1i = 3v2i), puck 1s position is r1i=x1ii, and puck 2s position is r2i=y2ij. a. Find an expression for their velocity after the collision in terms of puck 1s initial velocity. b. What is the fraction Kf/Ki that remains in the system?arrow_forwardA projectile of mass 2.0 kg is fired in the air at an angle of 40.0 to the horizon at a speed of 50.0 m/s. At the highest point in its flight, the projectile breaks into three parts of mass 1.0 kg, 0.7 kg, and 0.3 kg. The 1.0-kg part falls straight down after breakup with an initial speed of 10.0 m/s, the 0.7-kg part moves in the original forward direction, and the 0.3-kg part goes straight up. Launch a. Find the speeds of the 0.3-kg and 0.7-kg pieces immediately after the break-up. b. How high from the break-up point does the 0.3-kg piece go before coming to rest? c. Where does the 0.7-kg piece land relative to where it was fired from?arrow_forwardTwo skateboarders, with masses m1 = 75.0 kg and m2 = 65.0 kg, simultaneously leave the opposite sides of a frictionless half-pipe at height h = 4.00 m as shown in Figure P11.49. Assume the skateboarders undergo a completely elastic head-on collision on the horizontal segment of the half-pipe. Treating the skateboarders as particles and assuming they dont fall off their skateboards, what is the height reached by each skateboarder after the collision? FIGURE P11.49arrow_forward
- A tennis ball of mass 57.0 g is held just above a basketball of mass 500 g as shown in Figure P9.17. With their centers vertically aligned, both balls are released from rest at the same time, to fall through a distance of 1.20 m. (a) Find the magnitude of the downward velocity with which the basketball reaches the ground. (b) Assume that an elastic collision with the ground instantaneously reverses the velocity of the basketball while the tennis ball is still moving down. Next, the two balls meet in an elastic collision. To what height does the tennis ball rebound? Figure P9.17arrow_forwardA car of mass 750 kg traveling at a velocity of 27 m/s in the positive x-direction crashes into the rear of a truck of mass 1 500 kg that is at rest and in neutral at an intersection. If the collision is inelastic and the truck moves forward at 15.0 m/s, what is the velocity of the car after the collision? (See Section 6.3.)arrow_forwardWhat is the average momentum of an avalanche that moves a 40-cm-thick layer of snow over an area of 100 m by 500 m over a distance of 1 km down a hill in 5.5 s? Assume a density of 350kg/m3 for the snow.arrow_forward
- A soccer player runs up behind a 0.450-kg soccer ball traveling at 3.20 m/s and kicks it in the same direction as it is moving, increasing its speed to 12.8 m/s. (a) What is the change in the magnitude of the balls momentum? (b) What magnitude impulse did the soccer player deliver to the ball? (c) What magnitude impulse would be required to kick the ball in the opposite direction at 12.8 m/s, instead? (See Section 6.1.)arrow_forwardA 5-kg cart moving to the right with a speed of 6 m/s collides with a concrete wall and rebounds with a speed of 2 m/s. What is the change in momentum of the cart? (a) 0 (b) 40 kg m/s (c) 40 kg m/s (d) 30 kg m/s (e) 10 kg m/sarrow_forwardReview. A bullet of mass m = 8.00 g is fired into a block of mass M = 250 g that is initially at rest at the edge of a frictionless table of height h = 1.00 m (Fig. P9.45). The bullet remains in the block, and after the impact the block lands d = 2.00 m from the bottom of the table. Determine the initial speed of the bullet. Figure P9.45 Problems 45 and 46.arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Principles 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 LearningPhysics for Scientists and EngineersPhysicsISBN:9781337553278Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage Learning
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern ...PhysicsISBN:9781337553292Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningClassical Dynamics of Particles and SystemsPhysicsISBN:9780534408961Author:Stephen T. Thornton, Jerry B. MarionPublisher: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
Physics for Scientists and Engineers
Physics
ISBN:9781337553278
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
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781285737027
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Classical Dynamics of Particles and Systems
Physics
ISBN:9780534408961
Author:Stephen T. Thornton, Jerry B. Marion
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Impulse Derivation and Demonstration; Author: Flipping Physics;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9rwkTnTOB0s;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY