This document contains multiple physics problems involving Newton's laws of motion. It includes problems about:
- Analyzing the forces on a jumping flea from a graph of its acceleration over time.
- Calculating the minimum time and maximum thrust for a rocket to reach the speed of sound without breaking an instrument inside.
- Determining the reading of a bathroom scale in an accelerating elevator.
- Finding the maximum speed of a hospital elevator given the maximum force on a passenger.
This document contains multiple physics problems involving Newton's laws of motion. It includes problems about:
- Analyzing the forces on a jumping flea from a graph of its acceleration over time.
- Calculating the minimum time and maximum thrust for a rocket to reach the speed of sound without breaking an instrument inside.
- Determining the reading of a bathroom scale in an accelerating elevator.
- Finding the maximum speed of a hospital elevator given the maximum force on a passenger.
This document contains multiple physics problems involving Newton's laws of motion. It includes problems about:
- Analyzing the forces on a jumping flea from a graph of its acceleration over time.
- Calculating the minimum time and maximum thrust for a rocket to reach the speed of sound without breaking an instrument inside.
- Determining the reading of a bathroom scale in an accelerating elevator.
- Finding the maximum speed of a hospital elevator given the maximum force on a passenger.
This document contains multiple physics problems involving Newton's laws of motion. It includes problems about:
- Analyzing the forces on a jumping flea from a graph of its acceleration over time.
- Calculating the minimum time and maximum thrust for a rocket to reach the speed of sound without breaking an instrument inside.
- Determining the reading of a bathroom scale in an accelerating elevator.
- Finding the maximum speed of a hospital elevator given the maximum force on a passenger.
shown in Fig. P5.75. (See The Flying Leap of the Flea, by M.
Rothschild et al. in the November 1973 Scientic American.) This ea was about 2 mm long and jumped at a nearly vertical takeoff angle. Use the measurements shown on the graph to answer the questions. (a) Find the initial net external force on the ea. How does it compare to the eas weight? (b) Find the maximum net external force on this jumping ea. When does this maximum force occur? (c) Use the graph to nd the eas maximum speed. Figure P5.75 150
100 a /g 50
0.5
1.0
1.5
Time (ms)
5.76 .. CP A 25,000-kg rocket blasts off vertically from the
earths surface with a constant acceleration. During the motion considered in the problem, assume that g remains constant (see Chapter 13). Inside the rocket, a 15.0-N instrument hangs from a wire that can support a maximum tension of 45.0 N. (a) Find the minimum time for this rocket to reach the sound barrier 1330 m>s2 without breaking the inside wire and the maximum vertical thrust of the rocket engines under these conditions. (b) How far is the rocket above the earths surface when it breaks the sound barrier? 5.77 ... CP CALC You are standing on a bathroom scale in an elevator in a tall building. Your mass is 64 kg. The elevator starts from rest and travels upward with a speed that varies with time according to v(t2 = 13.0 m>s22t + 10.20 m>s32t 2. When t = 4.0 s, what is the reading of the bathroom scale? 5.78 ... CP Elevator Design. You are designing an elevator for a hospital. The force exerted on a passenger by the oor of the elevator is not to exceed 1.60 times the passengers weight. The elevator accelerates upward with constant acceleration for a distance of 3.0 m and then starts to slow down. What is the maximum speed of the elevator? 5.79 .. CP You are working for a shipping company. Your job is to stand at the bottom of a 8.0-m-long ramp that is inclined at 37 above the horizontal. You grab packages off a conveyor belt and propel them up the ramp. The coefcient of kinetic friction between the packages and the ramp is mk = 0.30. (a) What speed do you need to give a package at the bottom of the ramp so that it has zero speed at the top of the ramp? (b) Your coworker is supposed to grab the packages as they arrive at the top of the ramp, but she misses one and it slides back down. What is its speed when it returns to you? 5.80 .. A hammer is hanging by a light rope from the ceiling of a bus. The ceiling of the bus is parallel to the roadway. The bus is traveling in a straight line on a horizontal street. You observe that the hammer hangs at rest with respect to the bus when the angle between the rope and the ceiling of the bus is 67. What is the acceleration of the bus? 5.81 ... A steel washer is suspended inside an empty shipping crate from a light string attached to the top of the crate. The crate slides down a long ramp that is inclined at an angle of 37 above the horizontal. The crate has mass 180 kg. You are sitting inside the crate
(with a ashlight); your mass is 55 kg. As the crate is sliding down
the ramp, you nd the washer is at rest with respect to the crate when the string makes an angle of 68 with the top of the crate. What is the coefcient of kinetic friction between the ramp and the crate? 5.82 . CP Lunch Time! You are riding your motorcycle one day down a wet street that slopes downward at an angle of 20 below the horizontal. As you start to ride down the hill, you notice a construction crew has dug a deep hole in the street at the bottom of the hill. A Siberian tiger, escaped from the City Zoo, has taken up residence in the hole. You apply the brakes and lock your wheels at the top of the hill, where you are moving with a speed of 20 m > s. The inclined street in front of you is 40 m long. (a) Will you plunge into the hole and become the tigers lunch, or do you skid to a stop before you reach the hole? (The coefcients of friction between your motorcycle tires and the wet pavement are ms = 0.90 and mk = 0.70.) (b) What must your initial speed be if you are to stop just before reaching the hole? 5.83 ... In the system shown in Fig. P5.34, block A has mass m A, block B has mass m B, and the rope connecting them has a nonzero mass m rope. The rope has a total length L, and the pulley has a very small radius. You can ignore any sag in the horizontal part of the rope. (a) If there is no friction between block A and the tabletop, nd the acceleration of the blocks at an instant when a length d of rope hangs vertically between the pulley and block B. As block B falls, will the magnitude of the acceleration of the system increase, decrease, or remain constant? Explain. (b) Let m A = 2.00 kg, m B = 0.400 kg, m rope = 0.160 kg, and L = 1.00 m . If there is friction between block A and the tabletop, with mk = 0.200 and ms = 0.250, nd the minimum value of the distance d such that the blocks will start to move if they are initially at rest. (c) Repeat part (b) for the case m rope = 0.040 kg. Will the blocks move in this case? 5.84 ... If the coefcient of static friction between a table and a uniform massive rope is ms, what fraction of the rope can hang over the edge of the table without the rope sliding? 5.85 .. A 40.0-kg packing case is initially at rest on the oor of a 1500-kg pickup truck. The coefcient of static friction between the case and the truck oor is 0.30, and the coefcient of kinetic friction is 0.20. Before each acceleration given below, the truck is traveling due north at constant speed. Find the magnitude and direction of the friction force acting on the case (a) when the truck accelerates at 2.20 m>s2 northward and (b) when it accelerates at 3.40 m>s2 southward. 5.86 . CP Trafc Court. You are called as an expert witness in the trial of a trafc violation. The facts are these: A driver slammed on his brakes and came to a stop with constant acceleration. Measurements of his tires and the skid marks on the pavement indicate that he locked his cars wheels, the car traveled 192 ft before stopping, and the Figure P5.87 coefcient of kinetic friction between the road and his tires was 0.750. The charge is that he was speeding in a 45-mi>h zone. 18.0 cm He pleads innocent. What is your conclusion, guilty or innocent? How fast was he going when he hit his brakes? 5.87 ... Two identical 15.0-kg balls, each 25.0 cm in diameter, are suspended by two 35.0 cm 35.0 cm 35.0-cm wires as shown in Fig. P5.87. The entire apparatus is supported by a single 18.0-cm wire, and the surfaces of the balls are perfectly smooth. (a) Find the tension in each of the three wires. (b) How hard does each ball push on the other one?
(International Series of Monographs On Physics) Walter T. Grandy Jr. - Entropy and The Time Evolution of Macroscopic Systems-Oxford University Press, USA (2008) PDF