Accelerating shopping cart from rest

AI Thread Summary
To determine the mass of the dog food added to a shopping cart, the discussion emphasizes using Newton's second law (F=ma) and kinematic equations. The initial mass of the cart is 16.2 kg, and a force of 12.0 N is applied to accelerate it over a distance of 2.02 m in 3.00 s. Participants clarify that the acceleration must be calculated using the kinematic equation s = 1/2 a t^2, leading to an acceleration of approximately 1.346 m/s². Using this acceleration, the total mass (cart plus dog food) can be calculated, but confusion arises regarding the correct application of the formulas. Ultimately, the discussion resolves with the correct understanding of the kinematic equation and its application to find the mass of the dog food.
youxcrushxme
Messages
22
Reaction score
0
I'm pretty sure this is an easy problem but I don't know what formula to use -

At the local grocery store, you push a 16.2 kg shopping cart. You stop for a moment to add a bag of dog food to your cart. With a force of 12.0 N, you now accelerate the cart from rest through a distance of 2.02 m in 3.00 s. What was the mass of the dog food?

If anyone could just point me in the right direction I would appreciate it...in this class he only throws a bunch of formulas at us and doesn't really explain how to use them so I'm confused.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
F=ma will be the formula you will use in the end. How can you get acceleration from the data you have?
 
So you do F=ma which means a=F/m...so it's 12/16.2 which is .74...right?
 
well that is correct when the cart is pushed with 12 N of force BEFORE the dog food is added. You want to know the mass of the object you are pushing (the cart+dog food) so you would use m=F/a. But you don't have an a value. but you can use a kinematic equation to determine a from the distance and time values you have. s(t)=\frac{1}{2}at^2 should work where s is your distance traveled and t is the time.
 
I'm getting 1.346 for a but if you do m=F/a you get a mass of 8.91 which can't be right because it should be greater than the original 16.2
 
are you remembering to square the t?
 
Yes...s=2.02 and t=3, so I did st=1/2a(t^2) which gave me a=1.346, and since m=F/a I did 12/1.346 but the answer isn't coming out right...I don't know what I'm doing wrong
 
oh, sorry, that was s of t... like f(x)... not s*t. The left side is just s. so its s=1/2a(t^2)
 
ahh, ok...I got it :) thanks!
 
Back
Top