Finding acceleration through given equation

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The discussion centers on finding the acceleration of a test car at the moment it has zero velocity, given its position equation. The car's position is defined by the equation x(t) = 2.17 + (4.80 m/s²)t² - (0.100 m/s⁶)t⁶. To find the acceleration, the first derivative of the position function is calculated to determine the velocity function, v(t) = 9.6t - 0.6t⁵. The acceleration function is then derived as a(t) = 9.6 - 3.0t⁴, leading to an acceleration of 9.6 m/s² at t = 0. The discussion highlights challenges in understanding derivatives due to the fast pace of the physics course compared to calculus.
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Homework Statement



The position of the front bumper of a test car under microprocessor control is given by:
x(t) = 2.17 + (4.80m/s^2)t^2 - (0.100 m/s^6)t^6

Find the acceleration at the first instant when the car has zero velocity.

Homework Equations



The Attempt at a Solution



0m/s^2, 4.8m/s^2

I know that the first instant that the car has zero velocity is at 2.17m at 0 seconds in time. I also know that the car is about to accelerate at this instant. I can't figure out how to determine what the acceleration is though.
 
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dlp211 said:
I know that the first instant that the car has zero velocity is at 2.17m at 0 seconds in time.
How did you determine this?
 
delta x/delta t as t -> 0 is 2.17 (edit: this is wrong). It's because 2.17 is the starting point.

I don't know how to solve 2nd derivatives, I barely know anything about derivatives, our physics course is moving faster then our calc course right now.
 
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In order to find the velocity as a function of time, you take the first derivative of the position. What does that give you?

Once you have the velocity as a function of time, how would you find the acceleration?
 
I thought that the derivative function would be 9.6t - .6t^5. But I haven't actually learned derivatives yet.
 
dlp211 said:
I thought that the derivative function would be 9.6t - .6t^5.
Good! That's v(t). And you can solve for the first value of t to make that zero.

Now find a(t).
But I haven't actually learned derivatives yet.
Seems like you know enough to get through this problem.
 
so a(t) = 9.6 - 3.0t^4?

so a(t) = 9.6 m/s^2?
 
dlp211 said:
so a(t) = 9.6 - 3.0t^4?
Right!
so a(t) = 9.6 m/s^2?
Yes, that's the acceleration at t = 0. Call it a(t = 0), not a(t).
 
Thanks for the help! My lectures go so fast and I have a hard time following all the formulas.
 
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