I'm not insulted, it's alright.
I took physics in high school, and now I'm trying to learn it with calculus, now that I've completed the class. Somehow I got the impression that plug-and-chug is not how you're supposed to do this stuff when calculus is brought into the equation. Maybe I'm mistaken.
But just so I'm clear on how this problem was done so easily:
When I found the 375 J for the Kinetic Energy, the
KE = 0.5*30.0 kg*5.00 m/s = 375 J = 375 N*m
part, I thought that that was the only equation I needed to work the problem, which lead me to think about velocity and position and all that crazy math crap, which really was the long way to do it I guess.
When you guys mentioned F=ma and W=Fd, I was still thinking along the lines of acceleration and antiderivatives because I had the impression that the answer HAD to have some kind of calculus thing in it, so I went off trying to integrate a bunch of stuff... when really this was just a basic plug and chug thing.
Clearly I was thinking too hard. I appreciate the help, and don't hesitate to call me retarded or whatever if I make any mistakes.
A couple more things:
When blochwave says
blochwave said:
Work done by friction = 375=F*d, you're given the force
and I solve for d, does this mean that since 375 J is the work done by the friction, that the F is the Force done by the friction, and the d is the distance over which the friction is applied?
If that's true, then how could I figure out this problem if, instead of coming to rest, its speed decreases from 5.00 m/s like in the question to 2.00 m/s, and then asks me what distance it took for the friction of 20.0 N to slow it down to that speed?
It would be the same kind of problem, but with a different KE, right?
KE J = 0.5 * 30.0 kg * [ (5.00 m/s) ^2 - (2.00 m/s) ^2 ]
KE J = 20.0 N * d
KE J / 20.0 N = d
So is the Work done by the friction to slow the 30.0 kg object the Kinetic Energy of the friction... or is the Work equal to the Kinetic Energy of the object because it is the one slowing down and not the friction? Is Work done by something = Kinetic Energy of that something in all cases or just this one because it meets some crazy, convenient condition?