Kinematics question, easier way to do this?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Nathan phisi
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Kinematics
AI Thread Summary
Two cars are traveling in the same direction, with Car A starting 100 m behind Car B and accelerating at 2.5 m/s² while Car B maintains a constant speed of 20 m/s. To find when Car A will catch up, it is suggested to derive position equations for both cars and determine when the distance between them becomes zero. The initial approach of breaking the problem into time intervals was deemed tedious, prompting a search for a simpler method. A key insight is that since both cars start with the same velocity, the relative speed difference is crucial for calculating the catch-up time. Ultimately, understanding the relative motion simplifies the problem significantly.
Nathan phisi
Messages
5
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


Two cars are traveling in a straight line, in the same direction, along a multi-lane highway in adjacent lanes. Car A starts 100 m behind Car B and both cars are initially traveling with a velocity of 20 m s−1 . Car B maintains a constant velocity but Car A begins to accelerate at 2.5 m s−2 . How long will it take for Car A to draw level with Car B (in s)?
(A) 2.7 (B) 4.3 (C) 6.1 (D) 8.9 (E) 10

Homework Equations


vavg=d/t
a=change in v/t
vf=vi+at
Vf^2=vi^2 + 2*a*d
d=vi t + 0.5at^2
d=(vf+vi)/2 * t

The Attempt at a Solution


I broke up the question into time intervals. I started with seeing how long it took car B to reach the initial 100m, then used that time to see how far car A gone in that time interval. I continued to break up the question like this and it became very tedious as I got closer to the 8.9s correct answer, and was wondering if there was a simpler way to approach this question? Thanks
 
Physics news on Phys.org
You should focus on the difference in speed between the two cars, that's how car A is going to close the gap
 
  • Like
Likes Nathan phisi
Write two expressions, one for each car, giving the position at any time t. Subtract to get the distance between cars at any time t. Find at what specific time this distance becomes zero.
 
  • Like
Likes Nathan phisi
Nathan phisi said:

Homework Statement


Two cars are traveling in a straight line, in the same direction, along a multi-lane highway in adjacent lanes. Car A starts 100 m behind Car B and both cars are initially traveling with a velocity of 20 m s−1 . Car B maintains a constant velocity but Car A begins to accelerate at 2.5 m s−2 . How long will it take for Car A to draw level with Car B (in s)?
(A) 2.7 (B) 4.3 (C) 6.1 (D) 8.9 (E) 10

Homework Equations


vavg=d/t
a=change in v/t
vf=vi+at
Vf^2=vi^2 + 2*a*d
d=vi t + 0.5at^2
d=(vf+vi)/2 * t

The Attempt at a Solution


I broke up the question into time intervals. I started with seeing how long it took car B to reach the initial 100m, then used that time to see how far car A gone in that time interval. I continued to break up the question like this and it became very tedious as I got closer to the 8.9s correct answer, and was wondering if there was a simpler way to approach this question? Thanks
What would happen if both cars started with a velocity of ##0m/s##?
 
  • Like
Likes Nathan phisi
PeroK said:
What would happen if both cars started with a velocity of ##0m/s##?
Wow, thank you, that worked!
Just wondering how you went about solving it that way? Like, where does the cars starting at 0m/s come from? Is it because they started at the same velocity?
 
Nathan phisi said:
Wow, thank you, that worked!
Just wondering how you went about solving it that way? Like, where does the cars starting at 0m/s come from? Is it because they started at the same velocity?
Yes, the constant velocity with which they start makes mo difference to the rate at which the second car catches the first.

More formally, you can say you are using a reference frame moving along with the initial velocity.

A useful trick!
 
  • Like
Likes Nathan phisi
Consider it this way, as long as the cars have the same velocity, every change in the position of one of them will be matched by the other car, so you should just consider the difference in their speeds.

If a car goes 10 m/s and the other goes at 11 m/s and they start in the same position it will take 10 seconds for the faster car to get 10 m ahead of the first one
 
Back
Top