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Traveling Physics Problem |
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| Sep26-08, 08:41 PM | #1 |
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Traveling Physics Problem
A car travels due east with a speed of 35.0 km/h. Raindrops are falling at a constant speed vertically with respect to the Earth. The traces of the rain on the side windows of the car make an angle of 55.0° with the vertical. Find the velocity of the rain with respect to the following reference frames.
1. the car : ___m/s 2. the Earth: ___m/s I don't know how to solve this problem. I am bad at physics and I can't find any formulas to save me. If some could help walk me through it, help me, or point me in the right direction, that'd be great. Thanks. |
| Sep26-08, 09:00 PM | #2 |
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first need to convert units from km/h to m/s. Then it is all trigonometry. Draw yourself a diagram and label you knowns and unknowns. Post what you come up with.
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| Sep26-08, 09:12 PM | #3 |
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Ok, I converted 35km/h to m/s and I got 9.72222223. And I know the angle is 55 degrees. So, if I draw a triangle, I would label the angle between the hypotnues and adjacent 55 right?
I'm not sure what I am really supposed to draw or how I can convert 9.72222223 into the velocities I need. |
| Sep26-08, 10:51 PM | #4 |
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Traveling Physics Problem
Like, what formulas do I use to find the velocity in this problem?
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