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Kinetic Energy (Ek) Problems 1. A helicopter has a top speed of 111 m/s. If its kinetic energy at this speed is 21,000,000 J, what is the helicopter’s mass? 4. The male polar bear is the largest land predator. Its height when standing upright is over 3 m and its mass can be as much as 680 kg. Even so, the polar bear can reach speeds of up to 15.6 m/s. Determine the kinetic energy of a running polar bear. 2. In 1995, Karine Dubouchet of France reached a record speed in downhill skiing. If her mass was 51.0 kg and she had a kinetic energy of 9960 J, what was her speed? 5. The kinetic energy of a golf ball is measured to be 1433 J. If the golf ball has a mass of 47.0 g, what is the ball’s speed? 3. In 1987, the winner of the fastest auto race that year had a speed of 88.3 m/s. Suppose the kinetic energy of the winning car was 3,800,000 J, what was the mass of the car and its driver? 6. The leatherback turtle holds the record for the fastest water speed of any reptile: 9.78 m/s. Suppose the largest leatherback ever discovered swims at top leatherback speed. What is its mass if its kinetic energy is 60,800 J? Gravitational Energy (Eg) Problems 7. In 1992, Ukrainian Sergei Bubka used a short pole to jump to a height of 6.13 m. If the maximum gravitational energy associated with Bubka was 4800 J at the top of his jump, what was his mass? 8. Situated 4080 m above sea level, La Paz, Bolivia, is the highest capital in the world. If a car with a mass of 905 kg is driven to La Paz from a location that is 1860 m above sea level, what is the increase in gravitational energy? 9. What is the maximum gravitational energy of a 0.125 kg ball that is thrown to a maximum height of 17.5 m? 10. A sandbag of mass 200 kg is hanging motionless from a rope. If the gravitational energy stored in it is 35,600 J, how high above the ground is it? 11. A man of mass 63 kg climbs a set of stairs such that his body is 13.5 m higher than it was before. By how much has he increased his gravitational energy? 12. A skydiver of mass 73 kg loses 12,543 J of gravitational energy in 23 s. How much has he fallen in this amount of time? Elastic Energy (Eel) Problems 13. A produce scale at a supermarket uses a stretched spring to indicate the weight of fruits and vegetables. If five oranges with a total mass of 0.76 kg are placed in the scale, the spring will be stretched 2.3 cm. What is the force constant of the spring if 0.175 J of elastic energy is stored? 16. An arresting cable helps to slow jet planes as they land on an aircraft carrier. This is accomplished by two springs, each of which is attached to one end of the cable. Suppose the elastic potential energy stored in the springs while a jet is landing is 57,000,000 J. If each spring is stretched 102 m, what is the force constant of each spring? 14. A pogo stick contains a spring with a force constant of 15,000 N/m. Suppose the elastic potential energy stored in the spring as the pogo stick is pushed downward is 120 J. How far is the spring compressed? 17. A 1750 kg weather satellite moves in a circular orbit with a gravitational potential energy of 1.69 × 1010 J. At the satellite’s altitude above Earth’s surface, the free-fall acceleration is only 6.44 m/s/s. How high above Earth’s surface is the satellite? 15. An automobile to be transported by ship is raised 7.0 m above the dock. If its gravitational potential energy is 6.6 × 104 J, what is the automobile’s mass? 18. The force constant of the spring in a child’s toy car is 550 N/m. How much elastic potential energy is stored in the spring if the spring is compressed a distance of 1.2 cm? Name Date Pd Unit VII: Worksheet 1 Use pie charts to analyze the energy changes in each situation given. • Designate your choice of system with a dotted line, • Carefully label the pies to correspond with the positions of the objects given. (A, B, C, etc.) • The pies should be accurately divided and labeled with the energy storage mechanisms involved. 1. A ball is held above the ground, and then is dropped so it falls straight down. (Restrict your analysis to the ball moving in the air, BEFORE it hits the ground.) 2. A wind-up toy is wound up, then "walks" across a table and comes to a stop. 3. A baseball is thrown up in the air and then falls back down. Place velocity vectors beside each image of the baseball in the drawing, and do a pie chart for each position. 4. A ball rolls to a stop on the floor. ©Modeling Workshop Project 2006 1 Unit VII ws1 v3.0 5. A superball is dropped and bounces up and down. Do a pie chart for each position of the ball shown. Why does the ball not bounce as high each time? Where did the energy "go"? 6. An object rests on a coiled spring, and is then launched upwards. 7. A piece of clay is dropped to the floor. 8. A truck is driven at constant speed down the street. ©Modeling Workshop Project 2006 2 Unit VII ws1 v3.0 Name Date Pd Unit VII: Worksheet 3a For each situation shown below: 1. Show your choice of system in the energy flow diagram, unless it is specified for you. **Always include the earth in your system. 2. Decide if your system is frictionless or not, and state this. 3. Sketch an energy bar graph for the initial situation. 4. Then complete the analysis by showing energy transfers and the final energy bar graph. 1. Initial EK Eg Eel Final Energy Flow Diagram EK Final Eg Eel Eint Initial 0 0 2. Initial EK Eg Eel Energy Flow Diagram EK Final Eg Eel Eint Final Initial 0 0 3. y vo>0 yo=0 y>0 v=0 Initial EK Eg Eel Energy Flow Diagram EK Final Eg Eel Eint 0 0 0 ©Modeling Workshop Project 2006 1 Unit VII ws3a v3.0 4. A person pushes a car, with the parking brake on, up a hill. v=0 y>0 y Initial EK Eg Eel vo=0 yo=0 Energy Flow Diagram EK Final Eg Eel Eint 0 0 0 5. A load of bricks rests on a tightly coiled spring, then is launched into the air. y vo=0 yo=0 Initial EK Eg Eel v>0 Final 0 Energy Flow Diagram EK Final Eg Eel Eint 0 0 Initial EK Final Eg Eel Eint 6. A crate is propelled up a hill by a tightly coiled spring. y vo=0 yo=0 0 Initial EK Eg Eel v>0 Energy Flow Diagram Final Initial ©Modeling Workshop Project 2006 0 0 2 Unit VII ws3a v3.0 7. A bungee jumper falls off the platform and reaches the limit of stretch of the cord. y Initial EK Eg Eel v=0 0 Initial Final Energy Flow Diagram EK Final Eg Eel Eint EK Final Eg Eel Eint 0 0 8. An elevator, initially moving downward, is brought to rest on the ground floor. y system boundary Initial EK Eg Eel yo>0 vo>0 0 y=0 v=0 Energy Flow Diagram 0 0 9. Create your own situation and construct corresponding energy bar graphs and system schema. System = ______________________ Initial EK Eg Eel EK Final Eg Eel Eint 0 0 ©Modeling Workshop Project 2006 Energy Flow Diagram 3 Unit VII ws3a v3.0 Name Date Pd UNIT VII: WS 3b Quantitative Bar Graphs and Problems For each situation shown below: 1. In the energy flow diagram show the system you choose to analyze. Assume the systems to be frictionless unless stated otherwise. 2. Complete the energy bar graph QUANTITATIVELY (numerically accurate). 3. In the space below each diagram use conservation of energy equations to solve for the quantity called for in the question. 1. A moving cart hits a spring, traveling at 5.0 m/s at the time of contact. At the instant the cart is motionless, by how much is the spring compressed? Final Energy Flow Initial Diagram EK Eg Eel Eint EK Eg Eel 0 0 height (m) 2. Determine final velocity of the cart, assuming that 10% of the energy is dissipated by friction. v=0 Final Energy Flow Initial Diagram EK Eg Eel Eint EK Eg Eel 5 m = 20 kg v=? 0 0 0 3. A block is placed on a spring, compressing it 0.30m. What height does the block reach when launched by the spring? m = 500 v=0 k = 100 mN x = 0.30 m Initial 0 Fina ©Modeling Workshop Project 2006 Initial EK Eg Eel Energy Flow Diagram EK Final Eg Eel Eint 0 0 1 Unit VII ws3b v3.0 4. The bullet strikes a block of wood which exerts, on average, a force of 50,000N opposing the motion of the bullet. How far does the bullet penetrate? Final Energy Flow Initial Diagram EK Eg Eel Eint EK Eg Eel Initial Fina 0 0 5. A 200. kg box is pulled at constant speed by the little engine pictured below. The box moves a distance of 2.5 m across a horizontal surface. a) Draw a force diagram of all relevant forces acting on the box. b) Construct a qualitative energy bar graph/flow diagram for this situation. Be sure to specify your system. c) How much energy is transferred by the engine? d) What type of motion would occur if the engine pulled with a force of 500 N? Modify your force diagram and apply Newton's 2nd Law. 6. How far could the box in problem 5 be pulled at constant velocity with the expenditure of 8,000 J of energy? ©Modeling Workshop Project 2006 2 Unit VII ws3b v3.0 7. A person pulls a 50. kg box pictured below with a force of 100. N. The coefficient of kinetic friction is 0.15. a. Sketch a force diagram for the box. b. How much of the force acts in the direction of motion? How much energy is transferred (via working) by the person who pulls the box a distance of 10. m? c. Is the box moving at constant speed? Explain how you know. What does this tell you about the kinetic energy Ek of the system? d. How much energy is stored as internal energy due to friction in the pulling process? What eventually happens to this energy? e. Show that energy is conserved in the system, accounting for all the energy stored and transferred in the process. Final Energy Flow Initial Diagram EK Eg Eel Eint EK Eg Eel 0 0 ©Modeling Workshop Project 2006 3 Unit VII ws3b v3.0 Conservation of Energy Problems 1. A 2.4 kg bowling ball is dropped from a height of 12.2 m. Eventually, it strikes the ground. Assuming there is no friction, how fast is it moving the moment it touches the ground? 2. A 0.75 kg book is thrown into the air with a velocity of 8.25 m/s. Assuming there is zero air resistance and that it was thrown from ground level, to what maximum height does it rise? 3. A 2.4 kg bowling ball is rolled horizontally with a velocity of 3.0 m/s and eventually runs into a horizontal spring that stretches 0.35 m while bring the ball to rest. Assuming zero friction, what is the spring constant of the spring? 4. A spring with a spring constant of 735 N/m is set vertically into a hole in the ground and compressed so that a baseball of mass 0.15 kg can be set on the spring and be level with the ground. If releasing the spring launches the ball 4.5 m into the air, how much was it compressed? No air resistance. 5. How fast is the baseball in question #4 moving the very instant it leaves the spring? (Hint: the spring raises it a little above the ground before it stops touching the baseball). No friction. 6. A diver with a mass of 76 kg dives and strikes the water with a velocity of 14.1 m/s. What is the diver’s initial height? Assume no air resistance. 7. How fast is the diver in problem #6 moving when he is 5.0 m above the water (halfway down)? Assume no air resistance. 8. A man pushes a stationary car 5.5 m. The mass of the car is 1200 kg. At the end of this distance, the car has a speed of 1.75 m/s. With what force does the man push? (Hint: make the car the system and assume zero friction). 9. A bow and arrow are held 1.5 m above the ground. If the mass of the arrow is 0.100 kg and it is pulled back 55 cm how high does it rise? (k=950 N/m and there is zero friction). 10. How much force does the water apply on the diver in problem #7 if the diver comes to a stop underwater in 1.35 m? Momentum Problems 1. An 8-kilogram bowling ball is rolling in a straight line toward you. If its momentum is 16 kg·m/s, how fast is it traveling? 6. A 0.14-kilogram baseball is thrown in a straight line at a velocity of 30 m/s. What is the momentum of the baseball? 2. A beach ball is rolling in a straight line toward you at a speed of 0.5 m/s. Its momentum is 0.25 kg·m/s. What is the mass of the beach ball? 7. Another pitcher throws the same baseball in a straight line. Its momentum is 2.1 kg·m/s. What is the velocity of the ball? 3. A 4,000-kilogram truck travels in a straight line at 10.0 m/s. What is its momentum? 8. A 1-kilogram turtle crawls in a straight line at a speed of 0.01 m/s. What is the turtle’s momentum? 4. A 1,400-kilogram car is also traveling in a straight line. Its momentum is equal to that of the truck in the previous question. What is the velocity of the car? 5. The momentum of a car traveling in a straight line at 20 m/s is 24,500 kg·m/s. What is the car’s mass? 9. Which would take more force to stop in 10 seconds: an 8.0-kilogram ball rolling in a straight line at a speed of 0.2 m/s or a 4.0-kilogram ball rolling along the same path at a speed of 1.0 m/s? 10. Which would take more force to stop in 10 seconds: a 2.0-kilogram ball rolling in a straight line at a speed of 2.5 m/s or a 1.0-kilogram ball rolling along the same path at a speed of 5.0 m/s? Impulse Problems 1. A net force of 100 N is applied to a 20-kilogram cart that is already moving at 3 m/s. The final speed of the cart was 8 m/s. For how long was the force applied? 4. A 60-kg high jumper lands on a mat after her jump. The mat brings her to a stop after 1 s. She was traveling at 5.0 m/s when she landed on the mat. Note: The speed of the jumper at the top of her jump, before she started to fall toward the mat, was 0 m/s. a. What is the change in momentum for the jumper? 2. In A 3-kilogram ball is accelerated from rest to a speed of 10 m/s. a. What is the ball’s change in momentum? b. What is the force felt by the jumper upon impact with the mat? b. What is the impulse? c. If a constant force of 40 N is applied to change the momentum in this situation, for how long does the force act? 5. A 0.5-kg soccer ball is kicked with a force of 50 N for 0.2 seconds. The ball was at rest before the kick. What is the speed of the soccer ball after the kick? 3. A 2,000-kilogram car uses a braking force of 12,000 N to stop in 5 s. a. What impulse acts on the car? b. What is the change in momentum of the car? c. What is the initial speed of the car? 6. A baseball player hits a 0.155-kg fastball traveling at 44.0 m/s into center field at a speed of 50.0 m/s. If the impact lasts for 0.00450 s, with what force does he hit the baseball? 7. Tom Sawyer launches his 180-kg raft on the Mississippi River by pushing on it with a force of 75 N. How long must Tom push on the raft to accelerate it to a speed of 2.0 m/s? 8. In terms of impulse, why is the ride much more comfortable when an airplane is flying at constant speed versus when it is taking off or landing? 9. If identical bullets are shot from a pistol and a rifle, a bullet shot from the rifle will travel at a higher speed than a bullet from the pistol. Why? (Hints: Assume shooting force is the same in each case. The barrel of the rifle is longer than the barrel of the pistol.) 10. Show that the relationship between impulse and the change in momentum is another way of stating Newton's second law of motion. 11. Boxers attempt to move with an opponent’s punch when it is thrown. In other words, a boxer moves in the same direction as their opponent's punch. This movement may prevent a knockout blow being delivered by their opponent. Explain how. 12. Mats in a gym, airbags, and padding in sports uniforms are used to protect people from being injured. Explain why these soft objects used instead of rigid objects using your understanding of impulse and change of momentum. Conservation of Momentum Problems 1. A 63.0 kg astronaut is on a spacewalk when the tether line to the shuttle breaks. The astronaut is able to throw a spare 10.0 kg oxygen tank in a direction away from the shuttle with a speed of 12.0 m/s, propelling the astronaut back to the shuttle. Assuming that the astronaut starts from rest with respect to the shuttle, find the astronaut’s final speed with respect to the shuttle after the tank is thrown. 2. An 85.0 kg fisherman jumps from a dock into a 135.0 kg rowboat at rest on the west side of the dock. If the velocity of the fisherman is 4.30 m/s to the west as he leaves the dock, what is the final velocity of the fisherman and the boat? 3. A 38.0 kg boy on a 2.0 kg skateboard initially at rest tosses an 8.0 kg jug of water in the forward direction. If the jug has a speed of 3.0 m/s relative to the ground how fast and in what direction do the boy and skateboard move? 4. A student stumbles backward off a dock and lands in a small boat. The student isn’t hurt, but the boat drifts away from the dock with a velocity of 0.85 m/s to the west. If the boat and student each have a mass of 68 kg, what is the student’s initial horizontal velocity? 5. A child jumps from a moving sled with a speed of 2.2 m/s and in the direction opposite the sled’s motion. The sled continues to move in the forward direction, but with a new speed of 5.5 m/s. If the child has a mass of 38 kg and the sled has a mass 68 kg, what is the initial velocity of the sled? 6. A 50.0 g shell fired from a 3.00 kg rifle has a speed of 400.0 m/s. With what speed does the rifle recoil in the opposite direction? 7. Momentum conservation often assumes that the mass of an object remains constant throughout a process or event. However, a change in momentum can also occur when mass changes. Consider an automobile with a full tank of gasoline traveling at a velocity of 24.44 m/s to the east. The mass of the car when the fuel tank is full is 1292 kg. By the time the car has traveled this distance, its mass is 1255 kg. What is the car’s velocity at the end of the journey? 8. An ice skater at rest catches a bag of sand moving to the north with a speed of 5.4 m/s. This causes both the skater and the bag to move to the north at a speed of 1.5 m/s. If the skater’s mass is 63 kg, what is the mass of the bag of sand? 9. A 1500 kg car traveling at 15.0 m/s to the south collides with a 4500 kg truck that is initially at rest at a stoplight. The car and truck stick together and move together after the collision. What is the final velocity of the twovehicle mass? 10. A 15,000 kg railroad car moving at 7.00 m/s to the north collides with and sticks to another railroad car of the same mass that is moving in the same direction at 1.50 m/s. What is the velocity of the joined cars after the collision? Mixed Problems: Set 1 1. A car traveling through the mountains passes through three semi-circular curves in the road. Curve A has a radius of 14 m, Curve B has a radius of 25 m and Curve C has a radius of 8 m. Answer (a) in which curve does the car change direction more quickly, (b) in which curve does the car feel the most centripetal force, and (c) what is the source of this centripetal force? 2. Object A is placed 3 m away from Object B and the gravitational force between them is measured to be 40,500 N. Then object B is moved to a location such that the gravitational force between the objects is 4,500 N. (a)How far from object A is object B? (b) What principle do you have to know to predict this answer? 3. A 2.5 kg flowerpot falls from a balcony 12.5 m above the ground and hits a passing pedestrian in the head while it is moving at 14.66 m/s. (a)How tall was the passing pedestrian? (b) How fast would it have been moving if it had hit the ground instead? You must show all work including LOL charts. 4. A stalled motorist pushes his 1400 kg car with a force of 815 N for 65 m until it is on the shoulder of the highway. (a)How much working was done on the car? (b) How fast was the car moving at the end? 5. A stationary cue ball of mass 0.155 kg is struck by a cue stick giving the ball a velocity of 3.04 m/s. (a)What was the impulse provided by the cue stick? (b)If the force applied was 2.14 N how long was the cue stick in contact? 6. A 4.5 kg bowling moving to the right at 1.2 m/s strikes a 3.25 kg bowling ball moving to the left at 1.92 m/s. After the collision, the 4.5 kg ball moves to the left with a velocity of 1.4 m/s. (a) What is the velocity of the 3.25 kg ball? (b) The 4.5 kg ball is quickly slowed to a stop in 0.5 s by a man’s shoe. How much force did the show apply? 7. A 2400 kg truck moving at 14.5m/s runs head on into a 1150 kg car moving in the opposite direction at 16.5 m/s. The vehicles stick together. (a)What is the velocity of the combined vehicles after the collision? (b) The truck’s bumper was not designed to crumple, but the car’s was. Who felt the most force? Prove it. 8. A steak is sealed and placed into a freezer. (a) Describe what happens to the heat energy inside of it and its temperature. A week later it is thawed at room temperature. (b) Describe what happens to the heat energy inside of it and its temperature. Use only physics appropriate language. 9. A heat engine uses 1350 J of heat and does 675 J of working with it. (a) How much heat is expelled from the heat engine? (b) How much input heat is needed if the same engine did 833 J of working while expelling 450 J of waste heat? 10. (a) What is entropy? (b) What does the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics state? (c) Give examples of situations with high/low entropy. (d) A messy room is tidied up. Explain how the 2 nd Law remains true.