Calculating Distance Traveled in Varying Acceleration for Two Cars

AI Thread Summary
Car A travels a total distance by first moving at 60 km/h for 1.5 minutes, then accelerating to 80 km/h over 0.25 minutes, and finally decelerating to a stop. The calculations involve converting speeds to km/min and applying the kinematic equation for distance. The confusion arises in correctly identifying initial and final velocities for the acceleration phase. Car B accelerates uniformly to 160 km/h for 1.6 minutes before decelerating to rest, and similar calculations apply. Understanding the symbols in the equations is crucial for solving the problem accurately.
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Hello everyone! I just registered to this board, and need some help solving a physics problem. It reads:

Car A leaves a city and travels along a straight road for 1.5 min at 60km/h. It then accelerates uniformly for 0.25 min until it reaches a speed of 80 km/h. It proceedes at that speed for 2.0 min, then decelerates uniformly for 0.50min until it comes to rest. Car B leaves the same city along the same road and accelerates uniformly for 1.6 min until it reaches a speed of 160km/h. It then decelerates uniformly until it comes to rest again after 1.6 min. How far will the two cars have traveled during the different stages?

This is as far as I completely understand it:

Car A:
1 step: conversion 60km/h = 1 km/min
therefore = 1.5 km

2 step: conversion 80km/h = 1.33 km/min
therefore v = vo + at
1.33 - 1 = a = 1.32km/min
--------
.25

here is confusion:
x = x0 + v0t + 1/2at^2

x = 1.5 + 1.33(.25 min) + (1/2)(1.32)(.25)^2
or
x = (1/2)(1.32)(.25)^2
?
 
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x = x0 + v0t + 1/2at^2

is the correct formula. But you got to know what the symbols mean. x_0 is the position of the object at the moment it starts accelerating. You chose x_0 well. Similarily, v_0 is the speed of the object, also at the moment it starts accelerating. For some reason you set v_0 = 1.33 km/min, which is the FINAL speed. Of course, you need v_0 = 1 km/min.
 
Thanks. What do I use for x_0 for car B?
 
I'm not going to tell you unless you show some effort. Sorry, forum rules.

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=28
 
I like this place, answers aren't just givin!
 
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