Solve Force Problems | Acceleration, Velocity & Position | Need Help ASAP!

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The discussion focuses on solving force problems related to acceleration, velocity, and position. The first problem involves calculating the position of a 3.9 kg object after 3.8 seconds given two forces acting on it, with the user struggling to understand how to derive the position from the velocity. The second problem asks for the force acting on a 1.5 kg particle that moves 2.3 m in 2.9 seconds from rest. Key points include the need to integrate the velocity function to find the position function and the correct method for calculating the magnitude of the position vector. The user expresses confusion over the integration process and the calculations for position, indicating a need for clearer guidance.
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Force problems- help pls!

I need help with these problems:
1. A 3.9 kg object is subjected to two forces, F1= (2.8N)i + (-4N)j and F2= (3.7N)i + (-10.4N)j. The object is at rest at the origin at time t= 0.
a) What is the magnitude of the object's acceleration? Got That one.
b) What is the magnitude of the velocity at t= 3.8 s? Got that one too.
c) What is the magnitude of the object's position at t= 3.8 s? No idea how to do this one.

2. A 1.5 kg particle starts from rest and moves a distance of 2.3 m in 2.9 s under the action of a single, constant force. Find the magnitude of the force.

Please! Can someone help me asap!
 
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Magnitude = sqrt(i^2 + j^2) (components not just the unit vectors). Integrate the velocity function to find the position function and take the magnitude of the position vector at t = 3.8s. Shouldn't be too hard given this info.
 
I am sorry, I still don't get it :cry: . What do u mean by integrate the velocity function to get position function :confused:
 
How did you derive the velocity function? It should be a similar process going from velocity function to position function as acceleration to velocity function (integration)
 
I got the velocity like this:
v-v0 = at = (4.05) (3.8) = 15.39 m/s. which was correct.
I tried to figure out the magnitude of object's position like this:
v = change in x / change in t
15.39 = change in x / 3.8
change in x = 58.48 m. which was the wrong answer.
What am I doing wrong?
 
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