Help with an acceleration and distance problem

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In summary, the author attempted to use two equations to find the acceleration and distance traveled during negative acceleration, but neither equation worked. The book suggests using v = u + at and v^2= u^2 + 2aS, but the author found that v^2= u^2 + 2aS did not work. He then tried x = x initial + v initial X t + 1/2 at^2, but this yielded incorrect results. The author finally solved the problem by using v = u + at, converting miles to meters, and using the distance formula x = x initial + v initial X t + 1/2 at^2.
  • #1
science_rules
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Homework Statement


I asked a previous question that someone answered. They said to use two equations which i did, but it still didn't work. The problem is: a rocket sled goes 632 mil/hr and slows down to a stop in 1.40 seconds. find the negative acceleration and find the distance traveled during this negative acceleration. The equations suggested were: v = u + at for acceleration and v^2= u^2 + 2aS. I know the S means distance, and u stands for initial velocity. i converted the mil/hr --> met/sec


Homework Equations


i attempted to use the equations given: v = u + at and v^2= u^2 + 2aS to find the acceleration and distance and i also attempted to use the distance formula x = x initial + v initial X t + 1/2 at^2 to try to find the distance, which didnt work.
My book answers were -202 met/sec^2 acceleration and 119 met distance. i understand why acceleration is negative but don't know what i am doing wrong as far as solving.


The Attempt at a Solution


632 mil/hr --> 926.9 met/sec
632 mil/hr X 5280 ft/1 mil X 1 hr/3600 sec = 926.9 met/sec

using v = u + at = 926.9 met/sec + a1.40 sec. = -926.9met/sec / 1.40 =
-662.0 met/sec^2 acceleration??! is not even close to -202 met/sec.^2

using v^2 = u^2 + 2aS = (926.9 met/sec)^2 + 2(-662.0met/^2)S =
-859143.6 = 1324S= -859143.6/-1324 = 648.9 meters?? no where close to 119 meters.

using x = x initial + v initial X t + 1/2 at^2 = 0m + 926.9 met/sec. X 1.40 sec. + 1/2a(1.40)^2 = 1,297.6 + 1/2a1.96= -1,297.6 = 0.98 = -1,324 met/sec^2
A different answer from -662 met/sec^2 but still wrong.

using a = change in veloc. divided by change in time = 0 met/sec - 926.9 met/sec. divided by 1.40 sec. = -662.0 met/sec^2. same answer from using the v = u +at equation, and still wrong. there is something I'm not doing right, or something I'm missing, or both. i am lost as to what to do now. please help me understand step by step what i should be doing to solve these problems correctly.
 
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  • #2
Is your conversion to m/s correct? I don't ever use the imperial measurement system so i don't really know the conversion factors, but according to an online converter i just used, you haven't converter correctly. Try that again.

EDIT: I just realized, you converted to ft/sec not m/s. Convert the miles to METERS not FEET.
 
  • #3
:0 Oh! how stupid of me! i didnt notice what i did. i'll try and see if it works out correctly
 
  • #4
ok, i converted it correctly:
632 mil/hr X 1609.34 met/mil X 1 hr/3600 sec = 282.52 met/sec
then i used v = u + at
v = u + at = 282.52 + a1.40sec^2 = -282.52 / 1.40 = -202 met/sec^2 acceleration which is correct. but when i tried using v^2 = u^2 + 2aS it didn't work:
v^2 = u^2 +2aS = 282.52^2 + 2(-202)S = 79817 + 2(-202)S = -79817 = -404S=
-79817/-404 = 197 meters. this isn't right. the correct answer should be 119 meters.
 
  • #5
even using the distance formula: x = xinitial + vinitial t + 1/2 at^2 yields 197.5 meters which isn't the correct answer for distance. arrrrghhh! so i have the correct acceleration now but not the correct distance. hmmm.
 
  • #6
science_rules said:
ok, i converted it correctly:
632 mil/hr X 1609.34 met/mil X 1 hr/3600 sec = 282.52 met/sec
then i used v = u + at
v = u + at = 282.52 + a1.40sec^2 = -282.52 / 1.40 = -202 met/sec^2 acceleration which is correct. but when i tried using v^2 = u^2 + 2aS it didn't work:
v^2 = u^2 +2aS = 282.52^2 + 2(-202)S = 79817 + 2(-202)S = -79817 = -404S=
-79817/-404 = 197 meters. this isn't right. the correct answer should be 119 meters.

You can use the V2 = 2*a*x
x = (282.52)2/2*202 = 197.5

Are you sure you have the right initial conditions?

119 implies an acceleration in 1.4 sec of 121.42 and an original velocity of 170 m/s
 
  • #7
i know, but 119 meters is the answer my book gave me for the total distance. there can be typos but they aren't very often. i'll keep trying to calculate. :rolleyes:
 
  • #8
science_rules said:
i know, but 119 meters is the answer my book gave me for the total distance. there can be typos but they aren't very often. i'll keep trying to calculate. :rolleyes:

Unless there are some other conditions not mentioned by the problem statement, trust the math.

Good luck.
 
  • #9
My mistake! My answer is 198 meters! i looked at the answer in the book again and it's the same. i don't know why i kept thinking it was 119 meters! Math doesn't lie! i did do it correctly :)
 
  • #10
Solved :)
 

What is acceleration?

Acceleration is the rate of change of an object's velocity. It is a vector quantity, meaning it has both magnitude (speed) and direction.

What is the equation for acceleration?

The equation for acceleration is a = (vf - vi) / t, where a is acceleration, vf is final velocity, vi is initial velocity, and t is time.

How do I calculate distance with acceleration?

You can calculate distance with acceleration using the equation d = vi * t + 1/2 * a * t^2, where d is distance, vi is initial velocity, t is time, and a is acceleration.

What units are used for acceleration and distance?

Acceleration is typically measured in meters per second squared (m/s^2) and distance is measured in meters (m).

What are some real-life applications of acceleration and distance?

Acceleration and distance calculations are used in many fields, such as physics, engineering, and sports. They can be used to calculate the acceleration of a car, the distance traveled by a projectile, or the speed of a sprinter.

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