Overtaking Truck: How Far & How Fast for Car?

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A car accelerates from rest at 3.55 m/s² while a truck moves at a constant speed of 21.0 m/s. To determine when the car overtakes the truck, two equations of motion can be used: one for the car's acceleration and one for the truck's constant velocity. The car will overtake the truck when both vehicles have the same displacement, which can be visualized by graphing their positions over time. The discussion suggests either graphing the data or solving the equations directly to find the distance and speed at which the car overtakes the truck.
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At the instant the traffic light turns green, a car that has been waiting at an intersection starts ahead with a constant acceleration of 3.55 . At the same instant a truck, traveling with a constant speed of 21.0 , overtakes and passes the car.


How far beyond its starting point does the car overtake the truck?


How fast is the car traveling when it overtakes the truck?


Thanks for the help
 
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Ok you have two equations of motion 1 for constant velocity and one for constant acceleration.

Now you have two options.
Solve both equations for displacement/distance and make two data sets. I suggest graphing both data sets on a shared set of axes. Make time the hotizontal axis and position the vertical axis. This will give you the best sense of what is actually happening. Don't forget that the cars position will change as a smooth curve. This is the more time involved method.

Second method:
Use your eqns. Don't forget that the vehicles will pass when they have the same position (in this case displacement).

This is where I leave you for now. Good luck.
 
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