Calculating Dragster Acceleration, Force, & Driver Force

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the average acceleration, net force, and the force exerted by the seat on a driver in a dragster. The dragster, with a mass of 873 kg, accelerates from rest to 26.3 m/s in 0.59 seconds, resulting in an average acceleration of 44.6 m/s² and a net force of approximately 39,000 N. The force exerted by the seat on the driver, who weighs 68 kg, is calculated using the same acceleration, yielding a force of about 3,000 N. The conversation emphasizes the relationship between the dragster's mass and the driver's experience of force during acceleration. Overall, the calculations demonstrate the principles of physics in a practical scenario.
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Homework Statement


A 873kg dragster, starting from rest, attains a speed of 26.3 m/s in .59s.
a. Find the average acceleration of the dragster during this time interval.
b. What is the magnitude of the average net force on the dragster during this time?
c. Assume that the driver has a mass of 68kg. What horizontal force does the seat exert on the driver?

Mass = 873kg
Final velocity = 26.3 m/s
Final time = .59 seconds
Initial velocity = 0m/s
Initial time = 0 s

Homework Equations


average velocity = (Vf-Vi)/(Tf-Ti)
F=ma

The Attempt at a Solution


a. 26.3/.59= 44.6 m/s²
b. 873*44.6= 3.9*10^4 N
c. I'm not sure...
 
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Part a and b seems correct, well done..

You already figure out the net force on dragster,
using F=ma.

Part c is the same deal, but
what do you think be sensible value to insert as m ?
Is it affected by the mass of the dragster?

You should be able to figure the answer
 
Hmmm it's definitely affected by the mass of the dragster, but is the mass of the dragster including the mass of the driver? Perhaps 873-68= 805?
 
Think about this situation,

If you are are having the same accelerating in a heavy vehicle and a light vehicle. In which vehicle you are going to feel a stronger force? or it is the same?
 
I would think it would be the same; I'm thinking now that the force of the seat on him is really him hitting the seat? 68*44.6=3.0*10³?
 
Yup, correct
 
Thanks :)
 
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