Velocity and position of the boat

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the velocity and position of a boat after it leaves the dock with a given acceleration and additional wind velocity. At t=10 seconds, the velocity of the boat is determined to be 22.2 m/s, considering both the acceleration and wind effects. The position calculations yield 120 meters in the x-direction and 110 meters in the y-direction. Clarifications are made regarding the distinction between velocity and speed, emphasizing the importance of presenting results as vectors. The conversation highlights the need for careful attention to the components of motion in physics problems.
Yovanna
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Homework Statement


A boat leaves the dock at t=0 s and heads out into the lake with an acceleration of 2m/s^2i.A strong wind pushing the boat, giving it additional velocityof 2m/si+ 1m/sj.
(a) What is the velocity of the boat at t=10s?
(b) What is the position of the boat at t=10?

Homework Equations


v=vo+at
x=x0+vx0t+0.5at^2
y=y0+vy0t+0.5at^2

The Attempt at a Solution


v0=√(2^2+1^2)= 2.2m/s
v=2.2m/s+20m/s= 22.2m/s
x=0+20m+100m=120m
y=0+10m+100m=110m
 
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Hi Yovanna,

Yovanna said:

Homework Statement


A boat leaves the dock at t=0 s and heads out into the lake with an acceleration of 2m/s^2i.A strong wind pushing the boat, giving it additional velocityof 2m/si+ 1m/sj.
(a) What is the velocity of the boat at t=10s?
(b) What is the position of the boat at t=10?

Homework Equations


v=vo+at
x=x0+vx0t+0.5at^2
y=y0+vy0t+0.5at^2

The Attempt at a Solution


v0=√(2^2+1^2)= 2.2m/s
v=2.2m/s+20m/s= 22.2m/s
x=0+20m+100m=120m
y=0+10m+100m=110m
Note that in (a) they ask for the velocity, not the speed. So you'll want to keep all the vector components separated and give your result as a vector.

In (b), when you calculated the y-position component, where did the 100 m term come from?
 
gneill said:
Hi Yovanna,Note that in (a) they ask for the velocity, not the speed. So you'll want to keep all the vector components separated and give your result as a vector.

In (b), when you calculated the y-position component, where did the 100 m term come from?
ohh right! Thank you so much!
 
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