agoogler said:
Instantaneous velocity is derivative of displacement, so v= 2+3t^2
so at the third second v= 2+3*9=29 .
That looks right.
But there are 2 problems , first when I substitute 0 for t I get v=2 But they told us that the object starts from rest !
That is a good point.
You might want to check to make sure the equation was typed in/written down correctly. Either something is wrong with the
s = 3 + 2
t +
t3, or something is wrong with the statement that the object starts from rest (with the object beginning to move at time
t = 0). One way or the other, something is wrong with the problem statement.
Also I'm probably not supposed to use calculus . ( Its OK if I have to , but if there is a way without calculus then it is preferred .)
Calculus or no calculus, it doesn't change the fact that the object has a velocity of 2 m/s at time
t = 0, if we are to believe the
s = 3 + 2
t +
t3 equation. Using a non-calculus method won't change that fact. Calculus makes doing physics problems easier, but it doesn't change any results.
[Edit: One way out of this (sort of) is if the object was hit with an impulse at time
t = 0, such that there was infinite force applied over an infinitesimal interval of time, and the area of the impulse is finite (kind of like a baseball being hit with a baseball bat). With this, you can still calculate the
average force from time
t = 0 to time
t = 3, and the result will be finite. But you will get different answers depending on whether you start at 0
+ vs. 0
-. So something still looks fishy to me in the problem statement.]