Calculating Distance Traveled in Varying Acceleration for Two Cars

In summary, the conversation is about a physics problem involving two cars traveling on a straight road. Car A starts at 60 km/h and accelerates to 80 km/h, while Car B starts at 160 km/h and decelerates to a stop. The question is how far the cars will travel during the different stages of their journey. The formula for calculating distance is discussed, and help is offered but not given without effort from the person asking the question.
  • #1
Gadget
5
0
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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  • #2
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.
 
  • #3
Thanks. What do I use for x_0 for car B?
 
  • #4
I'm not going to tell you unless you show some effort. Sorry, forum rules.

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=28
 
  • #5
I like this place, answers aren't just givin!
 

1. How is car acceleration defined?

Car acceleration is defined as the rate of change of the car's velocity over time. In simpler terms, it is how quickly the car's speed increases or decreases.

2. What factors affect a car's acceleration?

There are several factors that can affect a car's acceleration, including the weight of the car, the engine power, the friction between the tires and the road, and the aerodynamic design of the car.

3. How is acceleration calculated?

Acceleration can be calculated by dividing the change in velocity by the change in time. The formula for acceleration is: a = (vf - vi)/t, where a is acceleration, vf is final velocity, vi is initial velocity, and t is time.

4. Why is acceleration important in car physics?

Acceleration is important in car physics because it helps determine how quickly a car can reach a certain speed, how well it can climb steep hills or make sharp turns, and how much power is needed to overcome air resistance and friction.

5. How can car acceleration be improved?

There are several ways to improve a car's acceleration, such as reducing the car's weight, increasing the engine power, using better tires with more grip, and improving the car's aerodynamic design to reduce air resistance. Additionally, regular maintenance and tuning of the car's engine and transmission can also help improve acceleration.

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