Physics I Problems

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Exercises

2.33 .. Mars Landing. In January 2004, NASA landed exploration vehicles on Mars. Part of the descent consisted of the following stages:
Stage A: Friction with the atmosphere reduced the speed from
19,300 km>h to 1600 km>h in 4.0 min.
Stage B: A parachute then opened to slow it down to 321 km>h in
94 s.
Stage C: Retro rockets then red to reduce its speed to zero over a
distance of 75 m.
Assume that each stage followed immediately after the preceding
one and that the acceleration during each stage was constant.
(a) Find the rockets acceleration (in m>s2) during each stage.
(b) What total distance (in km) did the rocket travel during stages
A, B, and C?
2.34 . At the instant the trafc light turns green, a car that has been
waiting at an intersection starts ahead with a constant acceleration
of 3.20 m>s2. At the same instant a truck, traveling with a constant
speed of 20.0 m>s, overtakes and passes the car. (a) How far
beyond its starting point does the car overtake the truck? (b) How
fast is the car traveling when it overtakes the truck? (c) Sketch an
x-t graph of the motion of both vehicles. Take x = 0 at the intersection. (d) Sketch a vx-t graph of the motion of both vehicles.

Section 2.5 Freely Falling Bodies

2.35 .. (a) If a ea can jump straight up to a height of 0.440 m,


what is its initial speed as it leaves the ground? (b) How long is it
in the air?
2.36 .. A small rock is thrown vertically upward with a speed of
18.0 m>s from the edge of the roof of a 30.0-m-tall building. The
rock doesnt hit the building on its way back down and lands in the
street below. Air resistance can be neglected. (a) What is the speed
of the rock just before it hits the street? (b) How much time elapses
from when the rock is thrown until it hits the street?
2.37 . A juggler throws a bowling pin straight up with an initial
speed of 8.20 m> s. How much time elapses until the bowling pin
returns to the jugglers hand?
2.38 .. You throw a glob of putty straight up toward the ceiling,
which is 3.60 m above the point where the putty leaves your hand.
The initial speed of the putty as it leaves your hand is 9.50 m>s.
(a) What is the speed of the putty just before it strikes the ceiling?
(b) How much time from when it leaves your hand does it take the
putty to reach the ceiling?
2.39 .. A tennis ball on Mars, where the acceleration due to gravity is 0.379g and air resistance is negligible, is hit directly upward
and returns to the same level 8.5 s later. (a) How high above its
original point did the ball go? (b) How fast was it moving just after
being hit? (c) Sketch graphs of the balls vertical position, vertical
velocity, and vertical acceleration as functions of time while Figure E2.40
its in the Martian air.
2.40 .. Touchdown on the
Moon. A lunar lander is
making its descent to Moon
Base I (Fig. E2.40). The lander
descends slowly under the retrothrust of its descent engine. The
engine is cut off when the lan5.0 m
der is 5.0 m above the surface
and has a downward speed of
0.8 m>s. With the engine off,

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the lander is in free fall. What is the speed of the lander just
before it touches the surface? The acceleration due to gravity on
the moon is 1.6 m>s2.
2.41 .. A Simple Reaction-Time Test. A meter stick is held vertically above your hand, with the lower end between your thumb
and rst nger. On seeing the meter stick released, you grab it with
these two ngers. You can calculate your reaction time from the
distance the meter stick falls, read directly from the point where
your ngers grabbed it. (a) Derive a relationship for your reaction
time in terms of this measured distance, d. (b) If the measured distance is 17.6 cm, what is the reaction time?
2.42 .. A brick is dropped (zero initial speed) from the roof of a
building. The brick strikes the ground in 2.50 s. You may ignore air
resistance, so the brick is in free fall. (a) How tall, in meters, is the
building? (b) What is the magnitude of the bricks velocity just
before it reaches the ground? (c) Sketch ay-t, vy-t, and y-t graphs
for the motion of the brick.
2.43 .. Launch Failure. A 7500-kg rocket blasts off vertically
from the launch pad with a constant upward acceleration of
2.25 m>s2 and feels no appreciable air resistance. When it has
reached a height of 525 m, its engines suddenly fail so that the
only force acting on it is now gravity. (a) What is the maximum
height this rocket will reach above the launch pad? (b) How much
time after engine failure will elapse before the rocket comes crashing down to the launch pad, and how fast will it be moving just
before it crashes? (c) Sketch ay-t, vy-t, and y-t graphs of the
rockets motion from the instant of blast-off to the instant just
before it strikes the launch pad.
2.44 .. A hot-air balloonist, ris- Figure E2.44
ing vertically with a constant
v 5 5.00 m/s
velocity of magnitude 5.00 m>s,
releases a sandbag at an instant
when the balloon is 40.0 m above
the ground (Fig. E2.44). After it is
released, the sandbag is in free fall.
(a) Compute the position and
velocity of the sandbag at 0.250 s
and 1.00 s after its release. (b) How
many seconds after its release will
the bag strike the ground? (c) With
what magnitude of velocity does it
strike the ground? (d) What is the
greatest height above the ground
that the sandbag reaches? (e)
40.0 m to ground
Sketch ay-t, vy-t, and y-t graphs for
the motion.
2.45 . BIO The rocket-driven sled Sonic Wind No. 2, used for
investigating the physiological effects of large accelerations, runs
on a straight, level track 1070 m (3500 ft) long. Starting from rest,
it can reach a speed of 224 m>s 1500 mi>h2 in 0.900 s. (a) Compute the acceleration in m>s2, assuming that it is constant. (b)
What is the ratio of this acceleration to that of a freely falling body
(g)? (c) What distance is covered in 0.900 s? (d) A magazine article
states that at the end of a certain run, the speed of the sled
decreased from 283 m>s 1632 mi>h2 to zero in 1.40 s and that
during this time the magnitude of the acceleration was greater than
40g. Are these gures consistent?
2.46 . An egg is thrown nearly vertically upward from a point
near the cornice of a tall building. It just misses the cornice on the
way down and passes a point 30.0 m below its starting point 5.00 s
after it leaves the throwers hand. Air resistance may be ignored.

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