How Do You Calculate Total Displacement in Multi-Stage Motion Problems?

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves calculating the total displacement of a particle undergoing multi-stage motion with varying accelerations over specified time intervals. The subject area pertains to kinematics and the application of kinematic equations.

Discussion Character

  • Mixed

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the use of kinematic equations to find displacement and velocity at different stages of motion. There are attempts to clarify how to derive the necessary velocities for subsequent stages based on previous results.

Discussion Status

The discussion is active, with participants exploring the relationships between the stages of motion. Some guidance has been offered regarding the use of velocity from earlier stages as inputs for later calculations. There is no explicit consensus on the final approach to finding the total displacement.

Contextual Notes

Participants are navigating the complexities of chained motion problems, where the results from one stage directly influence the next. There is an emphasis on understanding the connections between different parts of the problem.

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Homework Statement


A). A particle starts from rest and moves for 10 s with an acceleration of 2 m/s^2.
B). For the next 20 s, the acceleration of the particle is -1.2 m/s^2.
C). What is the displacement of the particle at the end of the 30 s.

2. Homework Equations

Kinematic equations

The Attempt at a Solution


hhqf3mW

I was able to find the Displacement of A = 100 m and B = 20 m
However I can't find the Displacement of C because I don't know how to find the last acceleration or V-final

Thank You.
 
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Draw a graph of the motion and from there you can see how to get the answer.

From part B you can get the velocity needed for part C. Remember vf=at+v0 where v0 is from part A
 
TheGeek said:
B = 20 m
How did you get that?
jedishrfu said:
From part B you can get the velocity needed for part C
Did you mean "From part A you can get the velocity needed for part B"?
 
Yes, it's a chained problem right? So the results of A with ##v_{Afinal}## and ##d_{Afinal}## are inputs to part B. and the results of ##v_{Bfinal}## and ##d_{Bfinal}## are inputs to C.
 

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