
Ch 8 Momentum
... A 0.0250-‐kg bullet is accelerated from rest to a speed of 550 m/s in a 3.00-‐kg rifle. The pain of the rifle’s kick is much worse if you hold the gun loosely a few centimeters from your ...
... A 0.0250-‐kg bullet is accelerated from rest to a speed of 550 m/s in a 3.00-‐kg rifle. The pain of the rifle’s kick is much worse if you hold the gun loosely a few centimeters from your ...
Document
... Class Exercise - 8 Three blocks A, B and C, weighing 3kg, 4kg and 8kg respectively are arranged one on top of other as shown. Top block A is attached to a rigid wall by a rigid, light rod. Blocks B and C are connected to each other by a light, unstretchable string passing around a light pulley. Fin ...
... Class Exercise - 8 Three blocks A, B and C, weighing 3kg, 4kg and 8kg respectively are arranged one on top of other as shown. Top block A is attached to a rigid wall by a rigid, light rod. Blocks B and C are connected to each other by a light, unstretchable string passing around a light pulley. Fin ...
Lecture 16 (Feb 29) - West Virginia University
... together and the resulting wreckage propagates at a common speed. Find the magnitude and the direction of of the velocity of the wreckage. Neglect Friction, i.e. any external forces. ...
... together and the resulting wreckage propagates at a common speed. Find the magnitude and the direction of of the velocity of the wreckage. Neglect Friction, i.e. any external forces. ...
Elastic Collision
... State that the impulse of an object is equal to the change in its momentum Use delta notation appropriately Solve for the magnitude of any variable in: impulse = p , impulse = m v , impulse = Fnet t State that the area under a Fnet vs. t graph is equal to the impulse Calculate simple areas SE Ca ...
... State that the impulse of an object is equal to the change in its momentum Use delta notation appropriately Solve for the magnitude of any variable in: impulse = p , impulse = m v , impulse = Fnet t State that the area under a Fnet vs. t graph is equal to the impulse Calculate simple areas SE Ca ...
9-1 Momentum and Its Relation to Force Example 9
... A fully fueled rocket has a mass of 21,000 kg, of which 15,000 kg is fuel. The burned fuel is spewed out the rear at a rate of 190 kg/s with a speed of 2800 m/s relative to the rocket. If the rocket is fired vertically upward calculate: (a) the thrust of the rocket; (b) the net force on the rocket a ...
... A fully fueled rocket has a mass of 21,000 kg, of which 15,000 kg is fuel. The burned fuel is spewed out the rear at a rate of 190 kg/s with a speed of 2800 m/s relative to the rocket. If the rocket is fired vertically upward calculate: (a) the thrust of the rocket; (b) the net force on the rocket a ...
1PP Examination Autumn 2002_postMod_2
... Assuming that the mass of the Eagle module is constant during its ascent and equal to 5000kg (of which 2700kg is fuel) and that the acceleration due to gravity on the moon, g=1.6ms-1, is assumed to be constant during the ascent, calculate the work required to lift Eagle to the command module. By how ...
... Assuming that the mass of the Eagle module is constant during its ascent and equal to 5000kg (of which 2700kg is fuel) and that the acceleration due to gravity on the moon, g=1.6ms-1, is assumed to be constant during the ascent, calculate the work required to lift Eagle to the command module. By how ...
Document
... Example: a proton-proton collision A proton collides elastically with another proton that is initially at rest. The incoming proton has an initial speed of 3.50 X 105 m/s and makes a glancing collision with the second proton*. After the collision, one proton moves off at an angle of 370 to the orig ...
... Example: a proton-proton collision A proton collides elastically with another proton that is initially at rest. The incoming proton has an initial speed of 3.50 X 105 m/s and makes a glancing collision with the second proton*. After the collision, one proton moves off at an angle of 370 to the orig ...
Freefall
... • Gravity is the force that causes the acceleration (the change in velocity) • Assume no air resistance during freefall, so acceleration due to gravity is a constant 10 m/s2 • Assume object start from rest (initial velocity will be zero) • Velocity can be calculated at any instant (v=gt) • Distance ...
... • Gravity is the force that causes the acceleration (the change in velocity) • Assume no air resistance during freefall, so acceleration due to gravity is a constant 10 m/s2 • Assume object start from rest (initial velocity will be zero) • Velocity can be calculated at any instant (v=gt) • Distance ...
Astronomy 110 Announcements: Goals for Today How do we
... A compact car and a Mack truck have a head-on collision. Are the following true or false? 1. The force of the car on the truck is equal and opposite to the force of the truck on the car. T 2. The momentum transferred from the truck to the car is equal and opposite to the momentum transferred from th ...
... A compact car and a Mack truck have a head-on collision. Are the following true or false? 1. The force of the car on the truck is equal and opposite to the force of the truck on the car. T 2. The momentum transferred from the truck to the car is equal and opposite to the momentum transferred from th ...
Physics 101 (F11) Q2A Name: Section: Score: /20
... 2. A toy rocket is fired vertically with zero initial velocity from the ground with a constant acceleration a (m/s2 ). After 2 s the fuel is exhausted. Still the rocket continues to go up (ignore air resistance; only gravity acts on the rocket). After 3 s (i.e, 5 s after launching), the rocket reach ...
... 2. A toy rocket is fired vertically with zero initial velocity from the ground with a constant acceleration a (m/s2 ). After 2 s the fuel is exhausted. Still the rocket continues to go up (ignore air resistance; only gravity acts on the rocket). After 3 s (i.e, 5 s after launching), the rocket reach ...
Announcements True or False: When a rocket blasts off, it pushes off
... The trick to flying is to throw yourself at the ground and miss. Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy An object in orbit around the Earth continually falls toward the ground, but it always misses. The object is, in a sense, “falling around” the Earth. ...
... The trick to flying is to throw yourself at the ground and miss. Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy An object in orbit around the Earth continually falls toward the ground, but it always misses. The object is, in a sense, “falling around” the Earth. ...