Physics for Scientists and Engineers
Physics for Scientists and Engineers
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781337553278
Author: Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher: Cengage Learning
bartleby

Concept explainers

bartleby

Videos

Textbook Question
Book Icon
Chapter 4, Problem 43AP

A spring cannon is located at the edge of a table that is 1.20 m above the floor. A steel ball is launched from the cannon with speed vi at 35.0° above the horizontal. (a) Find the horizontal position of the ball as a function of vi at the instant it lands on the floor. We write this function as x(vi). Evaluate x for (b) vi = 0.100 m/s and for (c) vi = 100 m/s. (d) Assume vi is close to but not equal to zero. Show that one term in the answer to part (a) dominates so that the function x(vi) reduces to a simpler form. (c) If vi is very large, what is the approximate form of x(v)? (f) Describe the overall shape of the graph of the function x(vi).

(a)

Expert Solution
Check Mark
To determine

The ball’s horizontal position as a function of vi.

Answer to Problem 43AP

The horizontal position of the ball as a function of vi is vi(0.002299vi2+0.1643)12+0.04794vi2.

Explanation of Solution

The location of the spring cannon is 1.20m above the floor and the launch angle of the ball with speed vi is 35.0° above the horizontal.

Write the formula to calculate the vertical distance covered by the ball

    y=yo+vyt12gt2                                                      (I)

Here, y is the vertical distance covered by the ball, vy is the component of the velocity in y direction, t is the time interval, g is the acceleration due to gravity and yo is the initial vertical distance above the floor.

Write the formula to vertical component of the velocity

    vy=visinθ

Here, vi is the velocity of the ball during projectile motion.

Substitute visinθ for vi in equation (I).

    y=yo+visinθ×t12gt2

Substitute 1.2m for yo, 0 for y, 35.0° for θ and 9.81m/s2 for g to find t.

    0=1.2m+visin35.0°×t129.81m/s2×t20=9.81m/s2×t22visin35.0°×t1.2m                                              (II)

Solve the equation (II).

    t=0.05846vi+(3.4184×103vi2+0.2446)12

Write the formula to calculate the horizontal distance covered by the ball

    x=vxt                                                                                            (III)

Here, vx is the component of velocity in x direction and t is the time interval.

Write the expression for the horizontal component of the velocity

    vx=vicosθ

Substitute vicosθ for vx and 0.05846vi+(3.4184×103vi2+0.2446)12 for t in equation (III).

    x=vicosθ×(0.05846vi+(3.4184×103vi2+0.2446)12)

Conclusion:

Substitute 35.0° for θ in above expression.

    x=vicos35.0°×(0.05846vi+(3.4184×103vi2+0.2446)12)=vi(0.002293vi2+0.1641)12+0.04788vi2                    (IV)

Therefore, the horizontal position of the ball as a function of v1 is vi(0.002293vi2+0.164)112+0.04788vi2.

(b)

Expert Solution
Check Mark
To determine

The horizontal position of the ball with vi=0.100m/s.

Answer to Problem 43AP

The horizontal position the ball with vi=0.100m/s is 0.0410m.

Explanation of Solution

From equation (IV),

    x=vi(0.002293vi2+0.1641)12+0.04788vi2

Substitute 0.100m/s for vi in above expression.

    x=(0.100m/s)(0.002293(0.100m/s)2+0.164)12+0.04788(0.100m/s)2=0.0410m

Conclusion:

Therefore, the horizontal position the ball as vi=0.100m/s. is 0.0410m.

(c)

Expert Solution
Check Mark
To determine

The horizontal position of the ball with vi=100m/s.

Answer to Problem 43AP

The horizontal position the ball with vi=100m/s is 959m.

Explanation of Solution

From equation (IV),

    x=vi(0.002293vi2+0.1641)12+0.04788vi2

Conclusion:

Substitute 100m/s for vi in above expression.

    x=(100m/s)(0.002293(100m/s)2+0.1641)12+0.04788(100m/s)2=959m

Therefore, the horizontal position the ball as vi=100m/s is 959m.

(d)

Expert Solution
Check Mark
To determine

The horizontal position of the ball as a function of v1 in a simpler form.

Answer to Problem 43AP

The horizontal position of the ball as a function of vi in a simpler form is 0.405v1.

Explanation of Solution

The located at the spring cannon is 1.2m above the floor and a ball is launched from the cannon with speed vi at 35° above the horizontal.

From equation (IV),

    x=vi(0.002293vi2+0.1641)12+0.04788vi2

The value of vi is nearly to zero that is v120.

Conclusion:

Substitute 0 for vi2 in above expression.

    x=vi(0.002293×0+0.16431)12+0.04788×0=0.405vi

Therefore, the horizontal position of the ball as a function of vi in a simpler form is 0.405vi.

(e)

Expert Solution
Check Mark
To determine

The horizontal position of the ball as a function of vi if the value of vi is very large.

Answer to Problem 43AP

The horizontal position of the ball as a function of vi is 0.095vi2 if the vi is very large.

Explanation of Solution

The located at the spring cannon is 1.2m above the floor and a ball is launched from the cannon with speed vi at 35° above the horizontal.

From equation (4),

    x=vi(0.002293vi2+0.1641)12+0.04788vi2=(0.002293vi4+0.1641vi2)12+0.04788vi2

Conclusion:

The term is vi very small compared to the vi2, so neglect the term 0.1643vi2.

    x=(0.00229vi4)12+0.0479vi2=0.0958vi2

Therefore, the horizontal position of the ball as a function of vi is 0.095vi2 if the vi is very large.

(f)

Expert Solution
Check Mark
To determine

The overall shape of the graph of position as a function of velocity.

Answer to Problem 43AP

The starting condition graph x versus vi is a straight line then with an increase in the value of vi curve become closer to the parabola.

Explanation of Solution

From the approximation in part (d), it follows that the position curve is a straight line with slope 0.405s for smaller values of vi and as vi increases, the curve becomes parabolic following the approximation in part (e).

Conclusion:

Therefore, the starting condition graph x versus vi is a straight line then with an increase in the value of vi curve become closer to the parabola.

Want to see more full solutions like this?

Subscribe now to access step-by-step solutions to millions of textbook problems written by subject matter experts!
Students have asked these similar questions
Juliet is standing in front of a wall and Romeo is at a window above her at a height of 3.61 m from the ground. Juliet tosses a box of candy straight up with speed 7.50 m/s from a height of 1.53 m above the ground. Ignore any effects due to air resistance. To receive full marks, you must include a diagram showing the physical situation and your choice of coordinate system. (a) Will the box reach Romeo? O Yes O No (b) If so, what is the box's speed when it reaches Romeo? If not, what initial speed must the rock have to reach Romeo? m/s
"A person stands on the ground 60m away from a cliff with a height h. They throw a ball toward the cliff with a speed of vp = 30 m/s and an angle of 60° above the horizontal. It lands on top edge of the cliff some time later. How high is the cliff, and what is the ball's impact speed?"
The banded archerfish is a species of fish that lives in mangrove estuaries in Asia and Oceania. It has a unique and highly effective hunting strategy: it shoots an incredibly precise stream of water out of its mouth at almost ten meters per second, knocking insects and other small animals into the water from nearby branches! Pom Fbug (t) Ө = Our hero, a hungry archerfish, has spotted a big, delicious bug sitting on a branch a height ħ above the surface of the water. The archerfish can shoot its water jet at a speed of vo. The archerfish wants to knock the bug sideways off of the branch, so it decides to shoot so that its water jet is moving horizontally at the moment when it strikes the bug. The final goal of this problem is to find the horizontal distance, d, from the branch, and the angle above horizontal, 0, at which archerfish should shoot. d (a) What are the position and velocity of the water droplet as a function of time and the position and velocity of the bug as a function of…

Chapter 4 Solutions

Physics for Scientists and Engineers

Ch. 4 - In a local bar, a customer slides an empty beer...Ch. 4 - Mayan kings and many school sports teams are named...Ch. 4 - A projectile is fired in such a way that its...Ch. 4 - The speed of a projectile when it reaches its...Ch. 4 - A rock is thrown upward from level ground in such...Ch. 4 - A firefighter, a distance d from a burning...Ch. 4 - A basketball star covers 2.80 m horizontally in a...Ch. 4 - A student stands at the edge of a cliff and throws...Ch. 4 - The record distance in the sport of throwing...Ch. 4 - A home run is hit in such a way that the baseball...Ch. 4 - A projectile is fired from the top of a cliff of...Ch. 4 - A boy stands on a diving board and tosses a stone...Ch. 4 - In Example 4.6, we found the centripetal...Ch. 4 - The astronaut orbiting the Earth in Figure P4.19...Ch. 4 - An athlete swings a ball, connected to the end of...Ch. 4 - The athlete shown in Figure P4.21 rotates a...Ch. 4 - A tire 0.500 m in radius rotates at a constant...Ch. 4 - (a) Can a particle moving with instantaneous speed...Ch. 4 - A ball swings counterclockwise in a vertical...Ch. 4 - A bolt drops from the ceiling of a moving train...Ch. 4 - The pilot of an airplane notes that the compass...Ch. 4 - You are taking flying lessons from an experienced...Ch. 4 - A car travels due east with a speed of 50.0 km/h....Ch. 4 - A science student is riding on a flatcar of a...Ch. 4 - A river has a steady speed of 0.500 m/s. A student...Ch. 4 - A river flows with a steady speed v. A student...Ch. 4 - You are participating in a summer internship with...Ch. 4 - A farm truck moves due east with a constant...Ch. 4 - A ball on the end of a string is whirled around in...Ch. 4 - Why is the following situation impassible? A...Ch. 4 - A particle starts from the origin with velocity...Ch. 4 - Lisa in her Lamborghini accelerates at...Ch. 4 - A boy throws a stone horizontally from the top of...Ch. 4 - Why is the following situation impossible? Albert...Ch. 4 - As some molten metal splashes, one droplet flies...Ch. 4 - An astronaut on the surface of the Moon fires a...Ch. 4 - A pendulum with a cord of length r = 1.00 m swings...Ch. 4 - A spring cannon is located at the edge of a table...Ch. 4 - A projectile is launched from the point (x = 0, y...Ch. 4 - A fisherman sets out upstream on a river. His...Ch. 4 - An outfielder throws a baseball to his catcher in...Ch. 4 - Do not hurt yourself; do not strike your hand...Ch. 4 - You are on the Pirates of the Caribbean attraction...Ch. 4 - A skier leaves the ramp of a ski jump with a...Ch. 4 - A projectile is fired up an incline (incline angle...Ch. 4 - Two swimmers, Chris and Sarah, start together at...Ch. 4 - In the What If? section of Example 4.5, it was...Ch. 4 - A fireworks rocket explodes at height h, the peak...
Knowledge Booster
Background pattern image
Physics
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.
Similar questions
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
Recommended textbooks for you
Text book image
Glencoe Physics: Principles and Problems, Student...
Physics
ISBN:9780078807213
Author:Paul W. Zitzewitz
Publisher:Glencoe/McGraw-Hill
Kinematics Part 3: Projectile Motion; Author: Professor Dave explains;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aY8z2qO44WA;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY