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nemzy
Feb24-04, 04:29 PM
Question:

A 41 g bullet, with horizontal velocity of 496 m/s, stops 13cm within a soid wall. What is the magnitue of the average Force from the wall stopping it?

This is how i tried to solve it

Vi = 496, Vf=0, and Xf-Xi=.13m

So Vf^2=Vi^2+2a(Xf-Xi)

Which = 0 = 246016+2a(.13)

solve for acceleration you get -946215...

F=m(a)...so i did (-946215)(41) which does not equal the answer? Am i doing anything wrong?


2nd Question:

A girl whose weight is 264 N slides down a 5.8 playground slide that makes an angle of 20degree with the horizontal. The coefficient of kinetic friction is 0.10. If she starts at the top with a speed of 0.457 m/s, what is her speed at the bottom?

This is how i tried to slove it

W= change in U + change in K + change in Thermal

Thermal = 143.98 (i wont show my calculations cause i am 100% sure this is righ)
so..
F(d)= -mgh +(1/2)mv^2 - (1.2)m(.457^2) +143.89

After you plug in all your variables, you have two unkowns,velocity and W.. Provided i did the setup right, how do i figure out the velocity of i dont know the magnitude of her force?

jamesrc
Feb24-04, 06:13 PM
#1: Check your units (41g = .041 kg)

#2. Work-energy theorem:

\Delta K + \Delta U = W_{nc}
K_i = \frac{mv_i^2}{2}
K_f = \frac{mv_f^2}{2}
U_f = 0 (your choice of datum)
U_i = mg(d\sin \theta)
W_{nc} = -fd

where
d = 5.8 m; length of the slide
\theta = 20^\circ ; angle of slide
f = μ N; friction force
μ = 0.10; coefficient of friction
N = mg\cos\theta ; normal force

nemzy
Feb24-04, 06:57 PM
inst the worky - enegy theorem change in K + change in U + change in Thermal (since there is friction?) = W

jamesrc
Feb24-04, 09:25 PM
OK,

How are you computing the "change in thermal energy" and what is your value for W?

turin
Feb25-04, 04:01 PM
Originally posted by nemzy
Question:

A 41 g bullet, ...
...
This is how i tried to solve it

... Vf^2=Vi^2+2a(Xf-Xi)
...
solve for acceleration you get -946215...
...How do you know that the acceleration is constant?




Originally posted by nemzy
2nd Question:

A girl whose weight is ...I wouldn't do it that way. I would use the kinematic equation that you are trying to use for the first question.