The document provides a series of physics exercises involving work, energy, force, and power. It includes questions about calculating work done by springs on blocks of ice and model cars, using the work-energy theorem to find speeds, calculating the speed of a sled propelled by a compressed spring, finding the force constant of springs that have been cut in half or thirds, and determining the initial compression of springs based on the maximum height or distance objects are propelled. It also includes questions about instantaneous power, the energy used by light bulbs and burned during different exercises, the power required to maintain the speed of a tandem bicycle, the power output of the sun and a neutron star, and calculating power used to stop a sliding
The document provides a series of physics exercises involving work, energy, force, and power. It includes questions about calculating work done by springs on blocks of ice and model cars, using the work-energy theorem to find speeds, calculating the speed of a sled propelled by a compressed spring, finding the force constant of springs that have been cut in half or thirds, and determining the initial compression of springs based on the maximum height or distance objects are propelled. It also includes questions about instantaneous power, the energy used by light bulbs and burned during different exercises, the power required to maintain the speed of a tandem bicycle, the power output of the sun and a neutron star, and calculating power used to stop a sliding
The document provides a series of physics exercises involving work, energy, force, and power. It includes questions about calculating work done by springs on blocks of ice and model cars, using the work-energy theorem to find speeds, calculating the speed of a sled propelled by a compressed spring, finding the force constant of springs that have been cut in half or thirds, and determining the initial compression of springs based on the maximum height or distance objects are propelled. It also includes questions about instantaneous power, the energy used by light bulbs and burned during different exercises, the power required to maintain the speed of a tandem bicycle, the power output of the sun and a neutron star, and calculating power used to stop a sliding
The document provides a series of physics exercises involving work, energy, force, and power. It includes questions about calculating work done by springs on blocks of ice and model cars, using the work-energy theorem to find speeds, calculating the speed of a sled propelled by a compressed spring, finding the force constant of springs that have been cut in half or thirds, and determining the initial compression of springs based on the maximum height or distance objects are propelled. It also includes questions about instantaneous power, the energy used by light bulbs and burned during different exercises, the power required to maintain the speed of a tandem bicycle, the power output of the sun and a neutron star, and calculating power used to stop a sliding
instantaneously? With the air track turned off, the coefcient of
kinetic friction is mk = 0.47. 6.40 . A 4.00-kg block of ice is placed against a horizontal spring that has force constant k = 200 N>m and is compressed 0.025 m. The spring is released and accelerates the block along a horizontal surface. You can ignore friction and the mass of the spring. (a) Calculate the work done on the block by the spring during the motion of the block from its initial position to where the spring has returned to its uncompressed length. (b) What is the speed of the block after it leaves the spring? S 6.41 . A force F is applied to a 2.0-kg radio-controlled model car parallel to the x-axis as it moves along a straight track. The x-component of the force varies with the x-coordinate of theS car as shown in Fig. E6.41. Calculate the work done by the force F when the car moves from (a) x = 0 to x = 3.0 m; (b) x = 3.0 m to x = 4.0 m; (c) x = 4.0 m to x = 7.0 m; (d) x = 0 to x = 7.0 m; (e) x = 7.0 m to x = 2.0 m. Figure E6.41 Fx (N) 2 1 0 21 22
x (m) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
model car in Exercise 6.41 is initially at
6.42 . Suppose the 2.0-kg S rest at x = 0 and F is the net force acting on it. Use the workenergy theorem to nd the speed of the car at (a) x = 3.0 m; (b) x = 4.0 m; (c) x = 7.0 m. 6.43 .. At a waterpark, sleds with riders are sent along a slippery, horizontal surface by the release of a large compressed spring. The spring with force constant k = 40.0 N>cm and negligible mass rests on the frictionless horizontal surface. One end is in contact with a stationary wall. A sled and rider with total mass 70.0 kg are pushed against the other end, compressing the spring 0.375 m. The sled is then released with zero initial velocity. What is the sleds speed when the spring (a) returns to its uncompressed length and (b) is still compressed 0.200 m? 6.44 . Half of a Spring. (a) Suppose you cut a massless ideal spring in half. If the full spring had a force constant k, what is the force constant of each half, in terms of k? (Hint: Think of the original spring as two equal halves, each producing the same force as the entire spring. Do you see why the forces must be equal?) (b) If you cut the spring into three equal segments instead, what is the force constant of each one, in terms of k? 6.45 .. A small glider is placed against a compressed spring at the bottom of an air track that slopes upward at an angle of 40.0 above the horizontal. The glider has mass 0.0900 kg. The spring has k = 640 N>m and negligible mass. When the spring is released, the glider travels a maximum distance of 1.80 m along the air track before sliding back down. Before reaching this maximum distance, the glider loses contact with the spring. (a) What distance was the spring originally compressed? (b) When the glider has traveled along the air track 0.80 m from its initial position against the compressed spring, is it still in contact with the spring? What is the kinetic energy of the glider at this point? 6.46 .. An ingenious bricklayer builds a device for shooting bricks up to the top of the wall where he is working. He places a
201
brick on a vertical compressed spring with force constant
k = 450 N>m and negligible mass. When the spring is released, the brick is propelled upward. If the brick has mass 1.80 kg and is to reach a maximum height of 3.6 m above its initial position on the compressed spring, what distance must the bricklayer compress the spring initially? (The brick loses contact with the spring when the spring returns to its uncompressed length. Why?) 6.47 .. CALC A force in the x-direction with magnitude F1x2 = 18.0 N - 10.530 N>m2x is applied to a 6.00-kg box that is sitting on the horizontal, frictionless surface of a frozen lake. F1x2 is the only horizontal force on the box. If the box is initially at rest at x = 0, what is its speed after it has traveled 14.0 m?
Section 6.4 Power
6.48 .. A crate on a motorized cart starts from rest and moves
with a constant eastward acceleration of a = 2.80 m>s2. A worker assists the cart by pushing on the crate with a force that is eastward and has magnitude that depends on time according to F1t2 = 15.40 N>s2t. What is the instantaneous power supplied by this force at t = 5.00 s? 6.49 . How many joules of energy does a 100-watt light bulb use per hour? How fast would a 70-kg person have to run to have that amount of kinetic energy? 6.50 .. BIO Should You Walk or Run? It is 5.0 km from your home to the physics lab. As part of your physical tness program, you could run that distance at 10 km> h (which uses up energy at the rate of 700 W), or you could walk it leisurely at 3.0 km> h (which uses energy at 290 W). Which choice would burn up more energy, and how much energy (in joules) would it burn? Why is it that the more intense exercise actually burns up less energy than the less intense exercise? 6.51 .. Magnetar. On December 27, 2004, astronomers observed the greatest ash of light ever recorded from outside the solar system. It came from the highly magnetic neutron star SGR 1806-20 (a magnetar). During 0.20 s, this star released as much energy as our sun does in 250,000 years. If P is the average power output of our sun, what was the average power output (in terms of P) of this magnetar? 6.52 .. A 20.0-kg rock is sliding on a rough, horizontal surface at 8.00 m>s and eventually stops due to friction. The coefcient of kinetic friction between the rock and the surface is 0.200. What average power is produced by friction as the rock stops? 6.53 . A tandem (two-person) bicycle team must overcome a force of 165 N to maintain a speed of 9.00 m>s. Find the power required per rider, assuming that each contributes equally. Express your answer in watts and in horsepower. 6.54 .. When its 75-kW (100-hp) engine is generating full power, a small single-engine airplane with mass 700 kg gains altitude at a rate of 2.5 m>s 1150 m>min, or 500 ft>min2. What fraction of the engine power is being used to make the airplane climb? (The remainder is used to overcome the effects of air resistance and of inefciencies in the propeller and engine.) 6.55 .. Working Like a Horse. Your job is to lift 30-kg crates a vertical distance of 0.90 m from the ground onto the bed of a truck. (a) How many crates would you have to load onto the truck in 1 minute for the average power output you use to lift the crates to equal 0.50 hp? (b) How many crates for an average power output of 100 W? 6.56 .. An elevator has mass 600 kg, not including passengers. The elevator is designed to ascend, at constant speed, a vertical