Accelleration and dispacement of planes and babiess

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The discussion revolves around calculating the time and minimum runway length required for an airplane to reach a take-off speed of 115 m/s with a maximum acceleration of 3.5 m/s². The time to accelerate can be found using the formula t = change in velocity / acceleration, resulting in approximately 82.86 seconds. For the runway length, the distance can be calculated using the formula d = 0.5 * acceleration * time², leading to a minimum runway length needed for take-off. Additionally, a question about a baby carriage accelerating down a ramp is discussed, clarifying that average velocity should be calculated correctly and that the final velocity at the bottom can be derived from the average velocity. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding basic physics formulas and their applications.
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one type of aeroplane has a maximum acceleration on the ground of 3.5ms-2
a)for how many seconds must it accellerare along a runway in order to reach its take-off speed of 115ms-1?
b) what is the minimum length of runway needed for it to reach this length?

ummm, not entirely sure
av acceleration=total change in velocity/time taken

speed=distance/time

for a) i thought that it might be 115/3.5 which gives 82.86 (4 sig fig)
but then b) i thought maybe v=d/t
so 3.5=115/x
but that obviosly comes out to 115/3.5 and so the same answer, i don't really know which i have write, if either.



also i have a question about a baby carriage on a ramp
it accellerates at an average rate and takes 15s to reach the bottom of a 5m ramp.

i got that the average velocity is 15/5= 3m/s
but i need to work out the velocity at the bottom of the ramp and then the average acceleration. I can quite happily get the acceleration if i can find the final velocity, but i don't really know. i thought that as the acceleration was uniform the final velocity might be 6m/s, but this doesn't seem right
thanks
resresd
 
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resresd said:
one type of aeroplane has a maximum acceleration on the ground of 3.5ms-2
a)for how many seconds must it accellerare along a runway in order to reach its take-off speed of 115ms-1?
b) what is the minimum length of runway needed for it to reach this length?

ummm, not entirely sure
av acceleration=total change in velocity/time taken

speed=distance/time

for a) i thought that it might be 115/3.5 which gives 82.86 (4 sig fig)
but then b) i thought maybe v=d/t
so 3.5=115/x
but that obviosly comes out to 115/3.5 and so the same answer, i don't really know which i have write, if either.
You considered two different ways and they come out to the same answer! Why does that bother you? In any case you shouldn't use a formula without thinking about it. Yes, "av acceleration=total change in velocity/time taken". Here you are told that the maximum acceleration is 3.5 m/s2 and that the change in velocity was 115 m/s. You are asked for the time: putting those numbers into the appropriate variables, 3.5= 115/t. Solve for t: t= 115(m/s)/3.5(m/s2)= 82.86 s. You can also check the units: to "divide" m/s by m/s2, invert the "fraction" and multiply: (m/s)(s2/m) which cancels to s (seconds) exactly what you want.


also i have a question about a baby carriage on a ramp
it accellerates at an average rate and takes 15s to reach the bottom of a 5m ramp.
I think that is intended to say it accelerates at a constant rate. "it accelerates at an average rate" doesn't make any sense.

i got that the average velocity is 15/5= 3m/s
but i need to work out the velocity at the bottom of the ramp and then the average acceleration. I can quite happily get the acceleration if i can find the final velocity, but i don't really know. i thought that as the acceleration was uniform the final velocity might be 6m/s, but this doesn't seem right
thanks
resresd
Presumably the baby carriage starts, at the top of the ramp, at 0 m/s. Now, HOW did you get "that the average velocity is 15/5= 3 m/s"? I hope you DIDN'T divide 15 s by 3 m! That would give you 15s/3m= 5 "s/m" which is NOT a unit of velocity! velocity is "distance divided by time" and you have it the wrong way around! Once you have correct average velocity you can find the velocity at the end of the ramp by using a very nice fact: as long as the acceleration is a constant, the average velocity is just the average of the velocity at the beginning and the final velocity. Since the velocity at the start is 0, the velocity at the bottom is just twice the average velocity.
 
thank you (also I've just noticed i wrote "write" meaning "right" which is more than mildly embarraing) only for b) of the first question it was looking for a distance (i realize i may have caused confusion with my bit about the answers i got as i clearly went momentarily insane) so i don't really know what the answer would be for that as i can't now figure out what to do
 
oh wait...v=d/t and now i have t, yet another blunder, woops! thanks
 
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