Calculating Acceleration and Distance: Entering the Freeway

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around a physics problem involving a car accelerating on a freeway entrance ramp. The car starts from rest and reaches a speed of 30 m/s after traveling 115 m. Participants are particularly focused on calculating the distance that traffic on the freeway travels while the car accelerates.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the calculations of acceleration and time taken for the car to travel the ramp. There is confusion regarding the distance traveled by freeway traffic during this time, with some questioning the correctness of their answers and others suggesting the need to consider constant velocity.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants sharing their calculations and questioning each other's reasoning. Some have provided guidance on using the formula for distance at constant velocity, while others express uncertainty about their results.

Contextual Notes

Participants are working under the constraints of a homework assignment, which may include specific rules about providing answers. There is a noted concern about rounding errors in calculations and the need to clarify the definitions of velocity and distance.

Musicman
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Entering the Freeway. A car sits in an entrance ramp to a freeway, waiting for a break in the traffic. The driver sees a small gap between a van and an 18-wheel truck and accelerates with constant acceleration along the ramp and onto the freeway. The car starts from rest, moves in a straight line, and has a speed of 30 m/s (67 mi/h) when it reaches the end of the 115 m long ramp.

Ok for the acceleration I got 3.91 m/s/s and got that it takes 7.61 s for the car to travel the length of the ramp, but I don't understand part C:

(c) The traffic on the freeway is moving at a constant speed of 30 m/s. What distance does the traffic travel while the car is moving the length of the ramp?

i got 117.4 m but idk
 
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Musicman said:
Ok for the acceleration I got 3.91 m/s/s and got that it takes 7.61 s for the car to travel the length of the ramp.
These are both correct, however I think you have induced a rounding error, the time should be 7.67s
Musicman said:
(c) The traffic on the freeway is moving at a constant speed of 30 m/s. What distance does the traffic travel while the car is moving the length of the ramp?

i got 117.4 m but idk
I'm afraid this is not correct. Don't forget the traffic is traveling at a constant velocity.
 
what did u get then? because I am totally lost like i knew what i was doing for the first 2 parts but not this part.
 
Musicman said:
what did u get then? because I am totally lost like i knew what i was doing for the first 2 parts but not this part.
I'm not giving you the answer :-p . Think about traveling at constant velocity. What is the equation for uniform velocity? How do you define velocity?
 
x=v of x times t
 
Musicman said:
x=v of x times t
Thats right, distance is equal to the product of velocity and time. Use it:wink:
 
well i put 29.75 and it said its wrong and it was my last submission so oh well, apparently 7.61 times 3.91 doesn't work.
 
Musicman said:
well i put 29.75 and it said its wrong and it was my last submission so oh well, apparently 7.61 times 3.91 doesn't work.
3.91 is the acceleration of the car traveling up the ramp not the velocity of the cars traveling on the freeway which would be 7.66 x 30 = 230m
 

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