Displacement in the 5th second.

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A particle with an initial velocity of 9 m/s east and a constant acceleration of 2 m/s² west is analyzed for its distance covered in the fifth second. The initial attempt incorrectly calculated the displacement as zero, but the correct distance covered is 0.5 m. The confusion arose from mixing up displacement and distance traveled. The correct method involves calculating the average velocity at the start and end of the fifth second and applying symmetry to find the total distance. The discussion confirms that the book's answer of 0.5 m is indeed accurate.
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Homework Statement


A particle has an initial velocity of 9m/s due east and a constant acceleration of 2 m/s2 due west. The distance covered by the particle in the fifth second of its motion is?


The Attempt at a Solution



Using the formula for the displacement in the nth second,
Sn = u + a(n-0.5)

I got S5=0.

The answer given is 0.5m.
 
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The answer given is wrong.

ehild
 
thanks!
 
Actually, the answer in the book is correct.

You didn't answer the question asked -- you gave the answer to a similar but different question.

(hint: zero is obviously a wrong answer to the question asked)
 
Thanks Hurkyl! As it was "displacement" in the title, I did not recognise that "distance covered" was distance travelled, and mixed it with displacement. In this case, the book is right.

ehild
 
Last edited:
Damn! even I thought it is displacement. I got the answer now.
This is how I did it -
observe that the velocity at the beginning of the 5th second is 1m/s and at its end is -1m/s. So we have to find the displacement for half second by symmetry and double it to get the distance travelled.

s = 1/2 -1/2*2*1/4 = 1/4m
Hence total distance is 0.5m. Is there any other method?
 
The distance traveled is equal to the integral of the speed (magnitude of the velocity, |v|) with respect to time. v is positive till t=4.5 s, and negative afterwards, so the integral is split into ∫(9-2t)dt from 4 to 4.5 and ∫(2t-9)dt from 4.5 to 5.

ehild
 
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