2-Dimensional Motion (non-trajectory)

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The discussion revolves around a physics problem involving a kayaker's motion, where the kayaker is initially moving south at 2 m/s and begins paddling west with an acceleration of 0.2 m/s². Participants clarify that the initial position of the kayaker is not necessary for solving the problem, focusing instead on the components of motion. The use of vector equations for displacement and velocity is emphasized, with suggestions to apply constant acceleration formulas. Confusion about initial velocities is addressed, confirming that the initial x-component can be assumed to be zero if the kayaker is not paddling. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding vector components in two-dimensional motion.
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Homework Statement


A kayaker 120 m east and 350 m kayaker is moving with the current at 2 m/s to the south. He begins to paddle west, giving the kayak an acceleration of 0.2m/s^2.

I need to find all the components for two events.. t1, t2, rsub1x,rsub2x,rsub1y,rsub2y, vsub2x, ect... up to a(sub12x) a(sub12y)

Homework Equations


Two vector equations :

d=Vnot0 +1/2at^2
V=Vnot0 +at

The Attempt at a Solution



Im guessing his location from his house is irrelevant(this problem has no "question").
I added the two vectors using 15s as my time and used pyth: 2^2 + (45/2)^2=d^2 and got 22.6m as the displacement.

Then i added the initial velocity 2m/s and the acc/time .2m/s^2(15s) and got 3.6 m/s as the final velocity.

I'm still confused with components and vectors. Is this right? How do I go about finding the components?
 
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Hi joeG215! :smile:

(there seem to be some words missing from the question :confused:)
joeG215 said:
A kayaker 120 m east and 350 m kayaker is moving with the current at 2 m/s to the south. He begins to paddle west, giving the kayak an acceleration of 0.2m/s^2.

I added the two vectors using 15s as my time and used pyth: 2^2 + (45/2)^2=d^2 and got 22.6m as the displacement. …

No, you don't need the displacement …

just use the components …

you have a constant speed south, and an acceleration west. :smile:
 
tiny-tim said:
Hi joeG215! :smile:

(there seem to be some words missing from the question :confused:)



lol that's what it looks like I know.. Ill try a link to the question --> http://file.taskstream.com/file/bclp85Uht2h0HjqkivMmdw75My3rhxcWnd3judYv9tl7Ma7stwRa8t2scNy6977cOacou3bFvb98bdWcm63scD49n0adLevxpyAuveeabYa5cbubReeqoddZm5grycZ0gxo0U7bygabXb9ci/2d_Motion_Modeling_Task_9_16_09.JPG"

If you can point me in the right direction that would be great.. Thanks
 
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joeG215 said:
lol that's what it looks like I know.. Ill try a link to the question --> http://file.taskstream.com/file/bclp85Uht2h0HjqkivMmdw75My3rhxcWnd3judYv9tl7Ma7stwRa8t2scNy6977cOacou3bFvb98bdWcm63scD49n0adLevxpyAuveeabYa5cbubReeqoddZm5grycZ0gxo0U7bygabXb9ci/2d_Motion_Modeling_Task_9_16_09.JPG"

erm :redface:
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tiny-tim said:
erm :redface:


lol ok.. Ill try one more time http://i393.photobucket.com/albums/pp13/j2bear15/2d_Motion_Modeling_Task_9_16_09.jpg"
 
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A kayaker 120 m east and 350 m north of home kayaker is moving with the current at 2 m/s to the south …

ok :rolleyes:

so the x is 120 and the y is 350 …

you have a constant speed south, and an acceleration west …

just use the standard constant acceleration equations :smile:
 
can i assume initial velocity on the x to be 0?
 
joeG215 said:
can i assume initial velocity on the x to be 0?

Yes of course …

if he doesn't paddle, his velocity is entirely 2 in the y-direction, so his initial x-component of velocity must be zero. :smile:
 
ah ok thanks a lot tiny -tim !
 
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