PHYSICS FOR SCIEN & ENGNR W/MOD MAST
4th Edition
ISBN: 9780134112039
Author: GIANCOLI
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Textbook Question
Chapter 9, Problem 28Q
If only an external force can change the momentum of the center of mass of an object, how can the internal force of the engine accelerate a car?
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 9 Solutions
PHYSICS FOR SCIEN & ENGNR W/MOD MAST
Ch. 9.1 - Light carries momentum, so if a light beam strikes...Ch. 9.1 - Prob. 1BECh. 9.2 - A 50-kg child runs off a dock at 2.0 m/s...Ch. 9.2 - In Example 93, what result would you get if (a)...Ch. 9.2 - Return to the Chapter-Opening Questions, page 214,...Ch. 9.8 - Calculate the CM of the three people in Example...Ch. 9.8 - Prob. 1GECh. 9.9 - A woman stands up in a rowboat and walks from one...Ch. 9 - We claim that momentum is conserved. Yet most...Ch. 9 - Two blocks of mass m1, and m2 rest on a...
Ch. 9 - A light object and a heavy object have the same...Ch. 9 - When a person jumps from a tree to the ground,...Ch. 9 - Explain, on the basis of conservation of momentum,...Ch. 9 - Two children float motionlessly in a space...Ch. 9 - A truck going 15 km/h has a head-on collision with...Ch. 9 - If a falling ball were to make a perfectly elastic...Ch. 9 - Prob. 9QCh. 9 - It is said that in ancient times a rich man with a...Ch. 9 - The speed of a tennis ball on the return of a...Ch. 9 - Is it possible for an object to receive a larger...Ch. 9 - How could a force give zero impulse over a nonzero...Ch. 9 - In a collision between two cars, which would you...Ch. 9 - A superball is dropped from a height h onto a hard...Ch. 9 - Prob. 16QCh. 9 - At a hydroelectric power plant, water is directed...Ch. 9 - A squash hall hits a wall at a 45 angle as shown...Ch. 9 - Why can a batter hit a pitched baseball farther...Ch. 9 - Describe a collision in which all kinetic energy...Ch. 9 - Inelastic and elastic collisions are similar in...Ch. 9 - If a 20-passenger plane is not full, sometimes...Ch. 9 - Prob. 23QCh. 9 - Why is the CM of a 1-m length of pipe at its...Ch. 9 - Show on a diagram how your CM shifts when you move...Ch. 9 - Describe an analytic way of determining the CM of...Ch. 9 - Place yourself facing the edge of an open door....Ch. 9 - If only an external force can change the momentum...Ch. 9 - A rocket following a parabolic path through the...Ch. 9 - How can a rocket change direction when it is far...Ch. 9 - In observations of nuclear -decay, the electron...Ch. 9 - Bob and Jim decide to play tug-of-war on a...Ch. 9 - At a carnival game you try to knock over a heavy...Ch. 9 - (I) Calculate the force exerted on a rocket when...Ch. 9 - (I) A constant friction force of 25 N acts on a...Ch. 9 - (II) The momentum of a particle, in SI units, is...Ch. 9 - (II) The force on a panicle of mass m is given by...Ch. 9 - (II) A 145-g baseball, moving along the x axis...Ch. 9 - (II) A 0.145-kg baseball pitched horizontally at...Ch. 9 - (II) A rocket of total mass 3180 kg is traveling...Ch. 9 - (III) Air in a 120-km/h wind strikes head-on the...Ch. 9 - (I) A 7700-kg boxcar traveling 18 m/s strikes a...Ch. 9 - (I) A 9150-kg railroad car travels alone on a...Ch. 9 - (I) An atomic nucleus at rest decays radioactively...Ch. 9 - (I) A 130-kg tackler moving at 2.5 m/s meets...Ch. 9 - (II) A child in a boat throws a 5.70-kg package...Ch. 9 - (II) An atomic nucleus initially moving at 420 m/s...Ch. 9 - (II) An object at rest is suddenly broken apart...Ch. 9 - (II) A 22-g bullet traveling 210 m/s penetrates a...Ch. 9 - (II) A rocket of mass m traveling with speed v0...Ch. 9 - (II) The decay of a neutron into a proton, an...Ch. 9 - A mass mA = 2.0 kg, moving with velocity...Ch. 9 - (II) A 925-kg two-stage rocket is traveling at a...Ch. 9 - (III) A 224-kg projectile, fired with a speed of...Ch. 9 - (I) A 0.145-kg baseball pitched at 35.0 m/s is hit...Ch. 9 - (II) A golf ball of mass 0.045 kg is hit off the...Ch. 9 - (II) A 12-kg hammer strikes a nail at a velocity...Ch. 9 - (II) A tennis ball of mass m = 0.060 kg and speed...Ch. 9 - (II) A 130-kg astronaut (including space suit)...Ch. 9 - (II) Rain is falling at the rate of 5.0 cm/h and...Ch. 9 - (II) Suppose the force acting on a tennis hall...Ch. 9 - (II) With what impulse does a 0.50-kg newspaper...Ch. 9 - (II) The force on a bullet is given by the formula...Ch. 9 - (II) (a) A molecule of mass m and speed v strikes...Ch. 9 - (III) (a) Calclale the impulse experienced when a...Ch. 9 - (III) A scale is adjusted so that when a large,...Ch. 9 - (II) A 0.060-kg tennis ball, moving with a speed...Ch. 9 - (II) A 0.450-kg hockey puck, moving east with a...Ch. 9 - (II) A 0.280-kg croquet ball makes an elastic...Ch. 9 - (II) A hall of mass 0.220 kg that is moving with a...Ch. 9 - (II) A ball of mass m makes a head-on elastic...Ch. 9 - (II) Determine the fraction of kinetic energy lost...Ch. 9 - (II) Show that, in general, for any head-on...Ch. 9 - (III) A 3.0 kg block slides along a frictionless...Ch. 9 - (I) In a ballistic pendulum experiment, projectile...Ch. 9 - (II) (a) Derive a formula for the fraction of...Ch. 9 - (II) A 28-g rifle bullet traveling 210 m/s buries...Ch. 9 - (II) An internal explosion breaks an object,...Ch. 9 - (II) A 920-kg spoils car collides into the rear...Ch. 9 - (II) You drop a 12-g ball from a height of 1.5 m...Ch. 9 - (II) Car A hits car B (initially at rest and of...Ch. 9 - (II) A measure of inelasticity in a head-on...Ch. 9 - (II) A pendulum consists of a mass M hanging at...Ch. 9 - (II) A build of mass m = 0.0010 kg embeds itself...Ch. 9 - (II) A 144-g baseball moving 28.0 m/s strikes a...Ch. 9 - (II) A 6.0-kg object moving in the +x direction at...Ch. 9 - (II) Billiard ball A of mass mA = 0.120 kg moving...Ch. 9 - (II) A radioactive nucleus at rest decays into a...Ch. 9 - (II) Two billiard balls of equal mass move at...Ch. 9 - (II) An atomic nucleus of mass m traveling with...Ch. 9 - (II) A neutron collides elastically with a helium...Ch. 9 - (III) A neon atom (m = 20.0 u) makes a perfectly...Ch. 9 - (III) For an elastic collision between a...Ch. 9 - (III) Prove that in the elastic collision of two...Ch. 9 - (I) The CM of an empty 1250-kg car is 2.50 m...Ch. 9 - (I) The distance between a carbon atom (m = 12 u)...Ch. 9 - (II) Three cubes, of side l0,2l0, and 3l0 are...Ch. 9 - (II) A square uniform raft, 18 m by 18 m, of mass...Ch. 9 - (II) A uniform circular plate of radius 2R has a...Ch. 9 - (II) A uniform thin wire is bent into a semicircle...Ch. 9 - (II) Find the center of mass of the ammonia...Ch. 9 - (III) Determine the CM of a machine part that is a...Ch. 9 - (III) Determine the CM of a uniform pyramid that...Ch. 9 - (III) Determine the CM of a thin, uniform,...Ch. 9 - (II) Mass MA = 35 kg and mass MB = 25 kg. They...Ch. 9 - (II) The masses of the Earth and Moon are 5.98 ...Ch. 9 - (II) A mallet consists of a uniform cylindrical...Ch. 9 - (II) A 55-kg woman and a 72-kg man stand 10.0 m...Ch. 9 - (II) Suppose that in Example 918 (Fig. 932), mII =...Ch. 9 - (II) Two people, one of mass 85 kg and the other...Ch. 9 - (III) A 280-kg flatcar 25 m long is moving with a...Ch. 9 - (III) A huge balloon and its gondola, of mass M,...Ch. 9 - (II) A 3500-kg rocket is to be accelerated at 3.0...Ch. 9 - (II) Suppose the conveyor bell of Example 919 is...Ch. 9 - (II) The jet engine of an airplane takes in 120 kg...Ch. 9 - (II) A rocket traveling 1850 m/s away from the...Ch. 9 - (III) A sled filled with sand slides without...Ch. 9 - A novice pool player is faced with the corner...Ch. 9 - During a Chicago storm, winds can whip...Ch. 9 - A ball is dropped from a height of 1.50 m and...Ch. 9 - In order to convert a tough split in bowling, it...Ch. 9 - A gun fires a bullet vertically into a 1.40-kg...Ch. 9 - A hockey puck of mass 4 m has been rigged 10...Ch. 9 - For the completely inelastic collision of two...Ch. 9 - A 4800-kg open railroad car coasts along with a...Ch. 9 - Consider the railroad car of Problem 92, which is...Ch. 9 - Two blocks of mass mA and mB, resting on a...Ch. 9 - You have been hired as an expert witness in a...Ch. 9 - A meteor whose mass was about 2.0 108 kg struck...Ch. 9 - Two astronauts, one of mass 65 kg and the other 85...Ch. 9 - A 22-g bullet strikes and becomes embedded in a...Ch. 9 - Two balls, of masses mA = 45 g and mB = 65 g, are...Ch. 9 - A block of mass m = 2.20 kg slides down a 30.0...Ch. 9 - In Problem 100 (Fig. 953), what is the upper limit...Ch. 9 - After a completely inelastic collision between two...Ch. 9 - A 0.25-kg skeet (clay target) is fired at an angle...Ch. 9 - A massless spring with spring constant k is placed...Ch. 9 - The gravitational slingshot effect. Figure 955...Ch. 9 - Two bumper cars in an amusement park ride collide...Ch. 9 - In a physics lab, a cube slides down a...Ch. 9 - The space shuttle launches an 850-kg satellite by...Ch. 9 - You are the design engineer in charge of the...Ch. 9 - Astronomers estimate that a 2.0-km-wide asteroid...Ch. 9 - An astronaut of mass 210 kg including his suit and...Ch. 9 - An extrasolar planet can be detected by observing...Ch. 9 - Suppose two asteroids strike head on. Asteroid A...Ch. 9 - (III) A particle of mass mA traveling with speed...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
The current through each resistor.
College Physics: A Strategic Approach (3rd Edition)
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)
Problems 30 through 38 describe a situation. For each problem, identify all the forces acting on the object and...
College Physics: A Strategic Approach (4th Edition)
The force, when you push against a wall with your fingers, they bend.
Conceptual Physics (12th Edition)
You rev your cars engine and watch the tachometer climb steadily from 1200 rpm to 5500 rpm in 2.7 s. What are (...
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
- A 2.00-kg particle has a velocity (2.00i3.00j)m/s, and a 3.00-kg particle has a velocity (1.00i+6.00j)m/s. Find (a) the velocity of the center of mass and (b) the total momentum of the system.arrow_forward(a) Does the center of mass of a rocket in free space accelerate? Explain. (b) Can the speed of a rocket exceed the exhaust speed of the fuel? Explain.arrow_forwardTwo particles of masses m1 and m2 , move uniformly in different circles of radii R1 and R2 R2 about origin in the x, y-plane. The x- and y-coordinates of the center of mass and that of particle 1 are given as follows (where length is in meters and tin seconds): x1(t)=4cos(2t) , y1(t)=4sin(2t) and: xCM(t)=4cos(2t) , yCM(t)=3sin(2t) . a. Find the radius of the circle in which particle 1 moves. b. Find the x- and y-coordinates of particle 2 and the radius of the circle this particle moves.arrow_forward
- In an elastic collision, a 400-kg bumper car collides directly from behind with a second, identical bumper car that is traveling in the same direction. The initial speed of the leading bumper car is 5.60 m/s and that of the trailing car is 6.00 m/s. Assuming that the mass of the drivers is much, much less than that of the bumper cars, what are their final speeds?arrow_forwardA water molecule consists of an oxygen atom with two hydrogen atoms bound to it (Fig. P8.36). The angle between the two bonds is 106. If the bonds are 0.100 nm long, where is the center of mass of the molecule? Figure P8.36arrow_forwardA uniform piece of sheet metal is shaped as shown in Figure P9.24. Compute the x and y coordinates of the center of mass of the piece. Figure P9.24arrow_forward
- The magnitude of the net force exerted in the x direction on a 2.50-kg particle varies in time as shown in Figure P9.10 (page 244). Find (a) the impulse of the force over the 5.00-s time interval, (b) the final velocity the particle attains if it is originally at rest, (c) its final velocity if its original velocity is 2.00im/s, and (d) the average force exerted on the particle for the time interval between 0 and 5.00 s. Figure P9.10arrow_forwardA tennis ball of mass mt is held just above a basketball of mass mb, as shown in Figure P8.22. With their centers vertically aligned, both are released from rest at the same moment so that the bottom of the basketball falls freely through a height h and strikes the floor. Assume an elastic collision with the ground instantaneously reverses the velocity of the basketball while the tennis ball is still moving down because the balls have separated a bit while falling. Next, the two balls meet in an elastic collision. (a) To what height does the tennis ball rebound? (b) How do you account for the height in (a) being larger than h? Does that seem like a violation of conservation of energy? Figure P8.22arrow_forwardA car of mass 1 560 kg traveling east and a truck of equal mass traveling north collide and become entangled, moving as a unit at 15.0 m/s and 60.0 north of east. Find the speed of (a) the car, and (b) the truck prior to the collision. (See Section 6.4.)arrow_forward
- Two bumper cars at the county fair are sliding toward one another (Fig. P11.54). Initially, bumper car 1 is traveling to the east at 5.62 m/s, and bumper car 2 is traveling 60.0 south of west at 10.00 m/s. They collide and stick together, as the driver of one car reaches out and grabs hold of the other driver. The two bumper cars move off together after the collision, and friction is negligible between the cars and the ground. a. If the masses of bumper cars 1 and 2 are 596 kg and 625 kg respectively, what is the velocity of the bumper cars immediately after the collision? b. What is the kinetic energy lost in the collision? c. Compare your answers to part (b) from this and Problem 54. Is one answer larger than the other? Discuss and explain any differences you find.arrow_forwardCenter of Mass Revisited N Find the center of mass of a system with three particles of masses 1.0 kg, 2.0 kg, and 3.0 kg kept at the vertices of an equilateral triangle of side 1.0 m (Fig. P10.15). FIGURE P10.15arrow_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
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- 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:9781938168000Author:Paul Peter Urone, Roger HinrichsPublisher:OpenStax College
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage LearningClassical Dynamics of Particles and SystemsPhysicsISBN:9780534408961Author:Stephen T. Thornton, Jerry B. MarionPublisher:Cengage LearningPrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher: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:9781938168000
Author:Paul Peter Urone, Roger Hinrichs
Publisher:OpenStax College
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...
Physics
ISBN:9781133939146
Author:Katz, Debora M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Classical Dynamics of Particles and Systems
Physics
ISBN:9780534408961
Author:Stephen T. Thornton, Jerry B. Marion
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Impulse Derivation and Demonstration; Author: Flipping Physics;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9rwkTnTOB0s;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY