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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves a scenario where a person (Tim) jumps off a skateboard, and the objective is to determine the velocity at which he jumps, given the masses of both Tim and the skateboard and the initial velocity of the skateboard. The subject area pertains to momentum and conservation laws in physics.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the application of momentum conservation principles, with one participant attempting to calculate the momentum of both Tim and the skateboard. Questions arise regarding the correct interpretation of momentum and the relevance of the skateboard's final velocity.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants providing guidance on the concept of momentum and clarifying misconceptions about weight versus mass. There is an exploration of the relationship between the initial and final states of the system, but no consensus has been reached on the specific calculations.

Contextual Notes

Participants note that the problem is different from previous class exercises and that the necessary equations have not been explicitly taught. There is also a mention of neglecting the vertical component of Tim's jump, which may affect the overall analysis.

lucky47
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I'm stuck doing this problem on my physics homework.. it's different than the type of problems we have been doing in class, and he hasn't taught us the equation to solve this question. The problem is: Tim, mass 50.00 kg, is riding a skateboard, mass 2.00 kg, traveling at 1.70 m/s. Tim jumps off and the skateboard stops dead in its tracks. With what velocity did he jump?

Can anyone tell me what equation to use in order to get the answer? :confused:
 
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Think of momentum...

The skateboard has a cerain momentum of 'mv'. What velocity would Tim have to jump off of the skateboard to cause the final velocity of the board to be zero?

Use conservation of momentum before and after the jump (remember Tim has initial momentum).

This is neglecting the vertical component of Tim's jump.

Regards,
Sam
 
Hm.. I'm not quite getting it. So to figure out the momentum of Tim, it is 50kg, his weight; times the velocity of the skateboard, 1.7m/s, correct?
And now the momentum of the skateboard is 2kg times 1.7m/s..
Now to find the velocity i take the two numbers I got from solving the above and divide it by the mass of the skateboard?

Am I remotely correct in what I am doing?
 
Firstly, let's clear something up... Momentum is the product of velocity and MASS (not weight: weight is a force).

You have worked out the total momentum before the jump, but note that the velocity of the skateboard is now zero, so dividing by its mass is not useful.

Tim after the jump however, has a momentum mv (you know his mass), what is v?

Sam.
 

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