Ly444999 said:
Was I supposed to add the mass of the child and potato sack together?
Reason it out... what is the reasoning you used for not doing it this way?
Were you, for eg, asked for the change in thermal energy on the potato sack and the child together or for the child alone?
How would the thermal energy likely be divided between the child and the sack anyway? (What is the mechanism that turns grav PE into thermal energy?)
Also was my answer, 511.632 J, correct or is there more I have to do to find the change in thermal energy? or is this whole approach wrong?
You are doing fine in your approach - just take care to identify the processes involved.
You correctly identify the source of the energy as gravitational PE that decreases ... this has to go to kinetic energy, and also to other stuff ... heat, sound, squashing potatoes, fraying the sack etc. By writing PE = KE + E(therm) you are saying you think all the PE that does not end up as motion goes to thermal stuff.
That seems fair in context.
As t if your answer is correct: depends what you mean by "correct". It looks consistent with your reasoning, the algebra and arithmetic seem to check out. Does that mean it is correct?
Maybe take another look at your reasoning. If you started from a false assumption, your result may not mean what you think it does.
A good test is to write out the answer in a sentence that rewords the question in the problem statement.
In this case the question is:
...what is the change in thermal energy of the child on their potato sack and the slide?
You want to be able to write:
"The change in thermal energy of the child on their potato sack and the slide is 511.632J."
... now: is that sentence true?
Aside: how many sig fig / dp should you keep in your numerical answer?