Potential energy and a skateboard, only have until 11:30

Click For Summary

Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around a problem involving potential energy and the motion of a skateboarder. The skateboarder has an initial speed and performs work on himself while also experiencing frictional work. Participants are tasked with calculating the change in gravitational potential energy and the change in vertical height.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Some participants discuss the conservation of energy and suggest defining a reference height. Others explore the relationship between work done and changes in energy, questioning how to set up the equations correctly.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with the problem, sharing their calculations and reasoning. Some have provided guidance on setting up equations, while others are exploring different interpretations of the problem's parameters. There is no explicit consensus on the final answers, but various approaches are being discussed.

Contextual Notes

Participants note the importance of defining the height reference point and the implications of nonconservative forces in the energy calculations. There is also mention of differing variable representations in online assignments.

kpangrace
Messages
17
Reaction score
0
Potential energy and a skateboard, only have until 11:30!

A 54.5 kg. skateboarder starts out with a speed of 1.95 m/s. He does +80.0 J of work on himself by pushing with his feet against the ground. In addition, friction does -265 J of work on him. In both cases, the forces doing the work are nonconservative. The final speed of the skateboarder is 6.10 m/s

Calculate the change (PE = PEf - PE0) in the gravitational potential energy

(b) How much has the vertical height of the skater changed?



ok so potential energy is PE=MGH buti don't see a vertical height here!

Please help!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
right...
You can define the height to be zero anwhere you like. I would suggest letting the height that he starts at be zero.

Set up your Conservation of Energy equations (ME_i = ME_f, where ME = KE +PE) using variables for any unknowns.
 
A 54.5 kg. skateboarder starts out with a speed of 1.95 m/s. He does +80.0 J of work on himself by pushing with his feet against the ground. In addition, friction does -265 J of work on him. In both cases, the forces doing the work are nonconservative. The final speed of the skateboarder is 6.10 m/s

(a) Calculate the change (PE = PEf - PE0) in the gravitational potential energy

(b) How much has the vertical height of the skater changed?
{Initial Total Energy} = (1/2)*m*v0^2 + PE0 = (1/2)*(54.5)*(1.95)^2 + PE0 =
= 103.62 + PE0
{Final Total Energy} = (1/2)*m*vf^2 + PEf = (1/2)*(54.5)*(6.10)^2 + PEf =
= 1013.97 + PEf
{Delta Total Energy} = {1013.97 + PEf} - {103.62 + PE0} =
= 910.35 + {Delta PE} =
= {Work Performed On Subject} = (80) + (-265) = (-185)
{Delta PE} = (-185) - (910.35)

A) {Delta PE} = (-1095.35 J)

m*g*{Delta H} = (-1095.35)
{Delta H} = (-1095.35)/{(54.5)*(9.8)}

B) {Delta H} = (-2.051 m)


~~
 
Last edited:
here's what i did. plug all the numbers into Wnc= (1/2mvf^2-1/2mv0^2)+(mghf-mgh0) and you get Wnc= a number + a number *(h0-hf)
then you go and find Wnc first since it already told you in the question= +80-265 and you get -185. so
-185=a number + a number *(h0-hf) and you can now find out what (h0-hf) equals to. which is close to 2. this is the answer to b (i got 2.15 because our variables are different on webassign)

answer to a. since you know what h0-hf is.
change in PE= mghf-mgh0
plug h0=hf+(your answer to B)
and you get
mghf-mghf-mg*(your answer to B)
mghf cancels out. -mg*(your answer to B) is the answer for A (negative number)

hope that helps...LOL
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
4K
Replies
5
Views
3K
Replies
23
Views
12K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
14K
Replies
5
Views
9K
  • · Replies 10 ·
Replies
10
Views
4K
  • · Replies 22 ·
Replies
22
Views
5K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
2K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
3K