How much force do I exert on the Earth?

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The discussion revolves around calculating the force exerted on the Earth during a jump, using weight, crouching distance, and jump height. The participant converted their weight to kilograms and applied the formula w = mg to find the force, resulting in an acceleration value that seemed incorrect. There was confusion regarding the expected answer format and whether the acceleration should include a negative sign to indicate direction. Ultimately, the correct upward acceleration required for a jump height of 60.4 cm was identified as 0.67g, factoring in the weight and the jump dynamics. The conversation highlights the complexities of interpreting physics problems and the nuances of acceleration as a vector.
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Homework Statement
Calculate your acceleration while jumping, the net force that acts on you while jumping, and the force you exert on Earth when you jump.
Relevant Equations
w = mg

acceleration = Net force / mass

2.2 lb = 1 kg
This question required measurements which are the following:

my weight = 108 lbs
crouching distance (the distance from my regular height to where I crouch) = 90.6 cm
jump height = 60.4 cm

I first converted lb to kg, and I got 49.09 kg. I then used this value for w = mg and inputted 9.80 for g and got w = 481.09 N. I then used this force for a = net force / mass and found the acceleration to be 9.7999 m/s/s.

This answer was wrong, and I was wondering why I went wrong in my work. The answer made sense to me — the only force, neglecting air resistance, acting on someone in the middle of their jump is acceleration due to gravity.
 
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Hello Cesium, :welcome: !

Doesn't your result (9.7999 m/s) look a lot like ##g## ?

(Small wonder if you first do ##W = mg## and then ##a = W/m## :smile: )​

I envy your 60 cm !

Jumping has three phases: you go from crouching to right up (accelerating), then you fly (basically free fall) and when you land you crouch again to soften the landing (decelerating).

cs44167 said:
This answer was wrong,
That surprises me: I agree with your reasoning and with your result. How do you know it's wrong (do you have the right answer, or just a red cross or something ?)

Perhaps - if your teacher is a computer in a strange backward country, the answer is expected to be expressed in antique units ? (Such as lbf, feet/forthnight2 or other :wink:)
 
BvU said:
Hello Cesium, :welcome: !

Doesn't your result (9.7999 m/s) look a lot like ##g## ?

(Small wonder if you first do ##W = mg## and then ##a = W/m## :smile: )​

I envy your 60 cm !

Jumping has three phases: you go from crouching to right up (accelerating), then you fly (basically free fall) and when you land you crouch again to soften the landing (decelerating).

That surprises me: I agree with your reasoning and with your result. How do you know it's wrong (do you have the right answer, or just a red cross or something ?)

Perhaps - if your teacher is a computer in a strange backward country, the answer is expected to be expressed in antique units ? (Such as lbf, feet/forthnight2 or other :wink:)
It’s on a website and gives a red x when the answer is incorrect. There’s never been an issue and the answer for acceleration is to be expressed in m/s/s. The only thing I was thinking was since acceleration is a vector if not having a negative sign was the issue.

We have three submissions, the first I put 9.80 m/s/s, then -9.80 m/s/s, and now I’m stuck.
 
I'm afraid I am stuck as well. Doesn't help but perhaps feels a little better.

I don't suppose the website is accessible for pagans from outside ?
 
BvU said:
I'm afraid I am stuck as well. Doesn't help but perhaps feels a little better.

I don't suppose the website is accessible for pagans from outside ?
The correct answer is a maximum upward acceleration a=.67g. This is what is required to produce a jump height of 60.4cm with an acceleration stretch over a distance of 90.6cm. Then add in the weight.
 
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I didn't read that in the problem statement, but I can understand that it's somewhat implicitly intended (semantics?). So a jump ends in that interpretation once the object leaves the ground.

@cs44167: If your career doesn't depend on it or you have more tries left, give it a try !

@hutchphd : you seem to know the website ?
 
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Perhaps I overstated...I think the correct answer is 1.67W... I don't know the website. Be glad to help more tomorrow.
 
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