Chapter 6: Q20Q (page 138)
How much longer (percentage) is a one-mile race than a 1500-mile race (“the metric mile”)?
Short Answer
A one-mile race is 7.27% longer than a 1500-mile race.
Chapter 6: Q20Q (page 138)
How much longer (percentage) is a one-mile race than a 1500-mile race (“the metric mile”)?
A one-mile race is 7.27% longer than a 1500-mile race.
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Get started for free(III) An engineer is designing a spring to be placed at the bottom of an elevator shaft. If the elevator cable breaks when the elevator is at a height h above the top of the spring, calculate the value that the spring constant k should have so that passengers undergo an acceleration of no more than 5.0 g when brought to rest. Let M be the total mass of the elevator and passengers.
How long will it take a 2750-W motor to lift a 385-kg piano to a sixth-story window 16.0 m above?
A hill has a height h. A child on a sled (total mass m) slide down starting from rest at the top. Does the speed at the bottom depends on the angle of hill if (a) it is icy and there is no friction, and (b) there is friction (deep snow)? Explain your answers.
A hand exerts a constant horizontal force on a block that is free to slide on a frictionless surface (Fig. 6–30). The block starts from rest at point A, and by the time it has traveled a distance d to point B it is traveling with speed \({v_{\rm{B}}}\). When the block has traveled another distance d to point C, will its speed be greater than, less than, or equal to \(2{v_{\rm{B}}}\)? Explain your reasoning.
FIGURE 6–30 Question 8.
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