Instantaneous Speed of Wheel Chair 5m from Exam Room

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The discussion centers on calculating the instantaneous speed of a wheelchair 5 meters from the examination room, where a healthcare professional pushes a 60kg patient in an 8kg wheelchair at a steady speed of 2m/s over a distance of 25m. Participants express confusion over the question's wording and the calculation of distance, with some suggesting that the path may not be linear, possibly implying a semicircular route. There is debate about whether the speed remains constant throughout the journey or if there are phases of acceleration and deceleration involved. Ultimately, the consensus leans towards the instantaneous speed being 2m/s, as the healthcare professional maintains this speed during the push. The conversation highlights the need for clearer problem statements in physics questions.
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Homework Statement



A 60kg patient arrives at the Reception area on a wheelchair that is 8kg. The healthcare professional has been asked to push the wheelchair to the Examination Room. The corridor from the Reception area to the Examination Room follows a circular path.

The healthcare professional pushes the wheelchair from its resting phase and maintains a steady speed of 2m/s as the wheelchair travels to its destination, which is 25m from the Reception area. It takes the Healthcare professional 80. sec to push the wheelchair patient from the Reception area to the Examination Room 2. Homework Equations
  1. Define the term ‘instantaneous speed’ and deduce what its value will be when the wheelchair is 5m away

    from the Examination Room. Justify your answer.

The Attempt at a Solution


[/B]

Instantaneous speed of wheel chair 5m away from examination room:

Instantaneous speed= distance/time

Time (t) = 80s

Speed (s) = 2m/s

Distance (d)= sxt

= 2m/s x 80s =160m

= 160m – 5m = 155mSo, @155m( 5m away from examination room) time= ? ? Speed= ??

Time (t) of wheel chair @ 155m = 5m/160m x 100 = 3.125%
t= 3.125/80s x 100 = 3.9s
t= 80s - 3.9s = 76.094s


Speed (s) of wheel chair 5m away from examination room = d/t

s = 155m/70.094s

= 2.03m/s

Using significant digits =2.0m/sTherefore, from the above justification, it the instantaneous speed of the wheel chair 5m away from the examination room remained at the steady speed of 2m/s. The speed of the wheel chair did not change in that ‘instant’ 5m away from the room as the patient was being pushed at a steady, unchanging speed the entire time.

Can someone please tell me if I'm on the right track or not, or give me any hints. This question has a lot of uncertainty. Not sure if i am meant to use 'waves' to figure it out?
no need to tell me the definition of instantaneous speed! thanks :D
 

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I think the question is poorly stated, is that exactly as the book says?
I understand it that the wheelchair traverses a semicircle with diameter of 25m which is definitely not a distance of 160m as you've calculated.
That is, your assumption of instantaneous acceleration is incorrect.
 
billy_joule said:
I think the question is poorly stated, is that exactly as the book says?
I understand it that the wheelchair traverses a semicircle with diameter of 25m which is definitely not a distance of 160m as you've calculated.
That is, your assumption of instantaneous acceleration is incorrect.
Yeah i thought my answer was completely wrong! The question is copied exactly word for word. I just assumed that i would state the answer is 2m/s as it is a 'Steady' speed? but then that also doesn't seem right?
 
billy_joule said:
I understand it that the wheelchair traverses a semicircle
Why semicircle? (I think chapp drew the diagram, so don't read too much into it.)
 
haruspex said:
Why semicircle? (I think chapp drew the diagram, so don't read too much into it.)
I'm not so sure. Reading back now, only the diagram implies a semicircle.

Either way, a terribly worded question that doesn't appear to have a solution.
@chapp what book is this from?
 
billy_joule said:
I'm not so sure. Reading back now, only the diagram implies a semicircle.

Either way, a terribly worded question that doesn't appear to have a solution.
@chapp what book is this from?

Its not out of a book, the questions were given to us from the teachers and that's the diagram that was given to us too.
 
chapp said:
Its not out of a book, the questions were given to us from the teachers and that's the diagram that was given to us too.
In that case maybe my initial interpretation was right.
That is, the distance traveled is 25m*π/2
in a time of 80s gives an average speed of ~0.5 m/s
If constant acceleration is assumed a max speed of 1 m/s is reached at the destination.

Or if we assume a constant speed of 2 m/s we end up with a travel time of ~20 seconds

I suspect the healthcare professional has traveled via the cafe and had a snack in the missing minute (or alternatively warped his perception of time after a trip to the drug cabinet).
 
billy_joule said:
In that case maybe my initial interpretation was right.
That is, the distance traveled is 25m*π/2
in a time of 80s gives an average speed of ~0.5 m/s
If constant acceleration is assumed a max speed of 1 m/s is reached at the destination.

Or if we assume a constant speed of 2 m/s we end up with a travel time of ~20 seconds

I suspect the healthcare professional has traveled via the cafe and had a snack in the missing minute (or alternatively warped his perception of time after a trip to the drug cabinet).

hahahahahah! (drug cabinet)
Thanks heaps for the help. I hope in the future the questions are more specific :H
 
  • #10
Let us know what the teacher says about the problem :smile:
 
  • #11
billy_joule said:
Let us know what the teacher says about the problem :smile:

i defiantly will! I've never been so frustrated over a question before hahahaha
 
  • #12
chapp said:
The healthcare professional pushes the wheelchair from its resting phase and maintains a steady speed of 2m/s

Are you sure it says "maintains" or is it "obtains"?

If it was "obtains" then I think you have a period of acceleration followed by a period of constant speed motion.

s = distance, v = final velocity (2ms), t = time

For the first phase..

s1 = 0.5 vt1 .... 1

For second phase

s2 = vt2......2

Also

s1 + s2 = 25m...3
t1 + t2 = 80s.....4

Four variables and 4 equations so can be solved.

You can then calculate if it has reached 2m/s by the time it gets to within 5m of the end. Perhaps it hasn't, I haven't checked.
 
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  • #13
Another possibility is that he accelerates until he obtains 2m/s then decelerates. but then you have to take issue with the word "steady" in the problem statement.
 
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