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ellusion
Oct22-06, 03:45 PM
hi im new to this and i have a problem that im stumped on.

Two trains, one travelling at 100km/h and the other at 128km/h, are headed towards one aanother along a straight level track. When the trains are 1.2km apart, each engineer sees the other train and applies the brakes. Both trains have equal, constant decelerations of 0.9 m/s^2. What is the distance they will be apart?

radou
Oct22-06, 03:49 PM
I suggest you first write down the equations for displacement in the case of constant acceleration (i.e. deceleration), and present us some attempts.

ellusion
Oct22-06, 04:02 PM
well this is what i have,

d=vt - 1/2at^2 and i believe i should find the time it takes

a= 0.9m/s^2 = 3.24km/h^2

Train 1
1.2 = 100t - 1/2(3.24)t^2
0= -1.2 + 100t - 1.62t^2

then i use the quadratic eqn to solve for t. am i on the right track?

radou
Oct22-06, 04:12 PM
Calculate the time it takes for every train to stop separately out of the equation v(t) = v_{0} - at = 0. Then, plug the times t into the equations for displacement for each train separately and calculate the distance each train travels until it stops. It should be fairly easy to find how far they are apart from each other now.

ellusion
Oct22-06, 04:29 PM
ahh okay thanks for the help