Chapter 4: Problem 18
True or false: A physics book on a table will not move at all if and only if the net force is zero.
Chapter 4: Problem 18
True or false: A physics book on a table will not move at all if and only if the net force is zero.
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Get started for freeA load of bricks of mass \(M=200.0 \mathrm{~kg}\) is attached to a crane by a cable of negligible mass and length \(L=3.00 \mathrm{~m}\). Initially, when the cable hangs vertically downward, the bricks are a horizontal distance \(D=1.50 \mathrm{~m}\) from the wall where the bricks are to be placed. What is the magnitude of the horizontal force that must be applied to the load of bricks (without moving the crane) so that the bricks will rest directly above the wall?
The gravitational acceleration on the Moon is a sixth of that on Earth. The weight of an apple is \(1.00 \mathrm{~N}\) on Earth. a) What is the weight of the apple on the Moon? b) What is the mass of the apple?
4.39 Arriving on a newly discovered planet, the captain of a spaceship performed the following experiment to calculate the gravitational acceleration for the planet: He placed masses of \(100.0 \mathrm{~g}\) and \(200.0 \mathrm{~g}\) on an Atwood device made of massless string and a frictionless pulley and measured that it took 1.52 s for each mass to travel \(1.00 \mathrm{~m}\) from rest.
A large ice block of mass \(M=80.0 \mathrm{~kg}\) is held stationary on a frictionless ramp. The ramp is at an angle of \(\theta=\) \(36.9^{\circ}\) above the horizontal. a) If the ice block is held in place by a tangential force along the surface of the ramp (at angle \(\theta\) above the horizontal), find the magnitude of this force. b) If, instead, the ice block is held in place by a horizontal force, directed horizontally toward the center of the ice block, find the magnitude of this force.
A person stands on the surface of the Farth. The mass of the person is \(m\) and the mass of the Earth is \(M\). The person jumps upward, reaching a maximum height \(h\) above the Earth. When the person is at this height \(h,\) the magnitude of the force exerted on the Earth by the person is a) \(m \mathrm{~g}\). c) \(M^{2} g / m\) e) zero. b) \(\mathrm{Mg}\) d) \(m^{2} g / M\).
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