Finding deceleration of a moving train

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the minimum deceleration required for a train to avoid hitting a car on the tracks. The engineer's reaction time of 0.36 seconds is factored into the distance the train travels before braking, which is calculated to be 4.32 meters. This distance is subtracted from the initial 250 meters, resulting in 245.68 meters available for braking. Using the kinematics equation, the deceleration is determined to be -0.29 m/s², with the magnitude reported as +0.29 m/s². The final consensus is that the calculated magnitude is correct, despite initial confusion regarding the sign of the answer.
garcia1
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Homework Statement



An engineer in a locomotive sees a car stuck
on the track at a railroad crossing in front of
the train. When the engineer first sees the
car, the locomotive is 250 m from the crossing
and its speed is 12 m/s.
If the engineer’s reaction time is 0.36 s,
what should be the magnitude of the mini-
mum deceleration to avoid an accident?
Answer in units of m/s2.


Homework Equations



I used the kinematics equation x = Vot + 1/2at^2 to find my answer.

The Attempt at a Solution



By solving for a, I got the answer 3791.358 m/s^2. This was wrong, and I'm also confused as to whether it should be a positive or negative answer.
 
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garcia1 said:
I used the kinematics equation x = Vot + 1/2at^2 to find my answer.

What did you use for t? It should be the maximum possible t such that the train doesn't hit the car, but this value is hard to compute.
 
I used the .36s reaction time, but i see how this is wrong now. Should I be finding the final velocity of the train when the engineer hits the breaks? Is it even necessary to find this time if I can assume that the final velocity of the whole problem would be zero, since the train would stop?
 
garcia1 said:
I used the .36s reaction time, but i see how this is wrong now. Should I be finding the final velocity of the train when the engineer hits the breaks? Is it even necessary to find this time if I can assume that the final velocity of the whole problem would be zero, since the train would stop?

Find the total distance over which braking can occur (the train keeps moving at its initial velocity during the engineer's reaction period). The train must go from its initial velocity to zero in that distance. You probably know a formula that relates initial and final velocities with acceleration and distance...:wink:
 
So I did do that through this rationale:

x = VoT (since a = 0, the rest of this equation cancels out)

Solving for this, x = 12*.36, I got 4.32m.

From here, I subtracted this from the initial distance, 250m, to yield 245.68m.

With the new distance, I calculated the acceleration by using the final velocity as 0m/s, with the following equation:

Vf^2 = Vo^2 + 2a(x - xo)

Vf = 0, Vo = 12, x = 245.68, and xo = 0

I solved for a, getting -.29 m/s^2.
I used the answer +.29 m/s^2 since the problem asks for the magnitude. Does this seem right, or should I be using the negative answer as is for this problem?
 
garcia1 said:
I solved for a, getting -.29 m/s^2.
I used the answer +.29 m/s^2 since the problem asks for the magnitude. Does this seem right, or should I be using the negative answer as is for this problem?

Magnitudes are always positive. You're fine.
 
I don't know, this answer still came up wrong on my homework, but it seems like this is the way to do it.
 
garcia1 said:
I don't know, this answer still came up wrong on my homework, but it seems like this is the way to do it.

0.29 m/s2 looks like the correct answer to me. Even the significant figures match those for the given values.
 
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