My Calculating Acceleration & Distance of a Car Moving at 70 km/h

  • Thread starter Thread starter BigCountry
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Kinematics
Click For Summary

Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating the acceleration and distance of a car moving at an initial speed of 70 km/h, which accelerates to 110 km/h over a period of 5 seconds. Participants are addressing issues related to unit conversions and the application of relevant kinematic equations.

Discussion Character

  • Mixed

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants are attempting to convert speeds from km/h to m/s and are discussing the correct formulas for calculating acceleration and distance. There are questions about the validity of the formulas used and the accuracy of unit conversions.

Discussion Status

Some participants have provided guidance on unit conversions and have pointed out errors in the original poster's calculations. There is ongoing exploration of different approaches to solving the problem, with no explicit consensus reached on the best method.

Contextual Notes

Participants are grappling with the implications of incorrect unit conversions and the need for consistent units throughout the calculations. The original poster's confusion regarding time conversion and the application of kinematic equations is also noted.

BigCountry
Messages
6
Reaction score
0
A car moving at 70 lm/h accelerates to a speed of 110 km/h in a time of 5 secs.

a) What was the cars acceleration?

b) How far did the car travel while accelerating for the 5 secs?

My Ans for a):

V1 (initial velocity)=70 km/h or 7000 m/s
v2 (final velocity)=110 km/h or 110000 m/s
t (time)=5 secs
Find a (acceleration)

a = V2 - V1 / t2 - t1
a = 110 - 70 / 5 - 0
a = 40 / 5
a = 8 km/h or 8000 m/s

I am not even close and believe I am wrong in converting to consistent units also. Am I even using the right formula? As for ans b), I believe I need to figure out the acceleration first. When I have that, I think the formula I should be using to figure out b) is d = (V1 + V2) / 2 x t. Is this even correct?

Your help is much appreciated,

:mad:
 
Physics news on Phys.org
you converted the km to meters, but you didn't convert the 1/hr to 1/seconds. i.e. 70km/h does NOT = 7000 m/s, it = 116.7 m/s.
 
Your conversions from km/h to m/s are wrong. The correct ratio is 1/3.6 rather than 1000.
You've confused the units: You will not get units km/h2 nor m/s2 with (km/h)/s.
 
My UPDATED Ans for a):

V1 (initial velocity)=70 km/h or 70000 m/h
v2 (final velocity)=110 km/h or 110000 m/h
t (time)=5 secs x 3600 secs/hr = 18000
Find a (acceleration)

a = V2 - V1 / t2 - t1
a = 110000 - 70000 / 18000 - 0
a = 40000/ 18000
a = 2.2 m/s

Thanks for your help on this one guys. Now b).

A car moving at 70 lm/h accelerates to a speed of 110 km/h in a time of 5 secs.

b) How far did the car travel while accelerating for the 5 secs?

The formula I used is: d = (V1 + V2) / 2 x t

d = (70000+110000) / 2 x 18000
d = 180000 / 2 x 18000
d = 90000 x 18000
d = 1.62 09 ?

I am obviously using the wrong formula. Please help.

:mad:
 
First off, you're usually better off converting to meters and seconds. It doesn't matter too much on your first problem, since you wound up with the same ratio. Still...

70 km/hr = 19.44 m/s
110 km/hr = 30.56 m/s

You still wind up with an acceleration of 2.2 m/sec^2 (not 2.2 m/s)

For the second problem, at least remember your basic equation for distance:

s_f=s_i + v_it + \frac{1}{2}at^2

(Or, you can be British and use 's' for final position, 'u' for initial position, and you wind up with an easy to remember acronym: suvat)

You can rearrange this for several different short cuts, but this equation works just about all of the time.
 
Last edited:
My Ans for b)

d = Vi t + at^2/2
d = 19.44*5 + 2.2(5^2)/2
d = 97.2 + 27.5
d = 124.7 m

Thanks for all of your help,
Much, much, much appreciated!
 
You should recognize that "5 seconds" is NOT 18000 hours of time ...

You knew that much of the difficulty of this problem was going to be UNITS,
yet you refused to use them for the time conversion [18000 SEC^2 / HOUR]
even after you screwed up the speed conversion!

By the way, YOUR way of finding the distance traveled is better than BobG's , since yours does not use the (possibly wrong) computed result.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 20 ·
Replies
20
Views
2K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
2K
Replies
40
Views
3K
  • · Replies 7 ·
Replies
7
Views
1K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • · Replies 8 ·
Replies
8
Views
2K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
3K
Replies
9
Views
16K