* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Student Text, pp. 159-161
Center of mass wikipedia , lookup
Equations of motion wikipedia , lookup
Hunting oscillation wikipedia , lookup
Work (physics) wikipedia , lookup
Coriolis force wikipedia , lookup
Fictitious force wikipedia , lookup
Modified Newtonian dynamics wikipedia , lookup
Centrifugal force wikipedia , lookup
Earth's rotation wikipedia , lookup
Newton's laws of motion wikipedia , lookup
Jerk (physics) wikipedia , lookup
Mass versus weight wikipedia , lookup
Newton's theorem of revolving orbits wikipedia , lookup
Seismometer wikipedia , lookup
REVIEW Chapter 3 Understanding Concepts 1. Is centripetal acceleration an instantaneous accelera- tion, an average acceleration, both, or neither? Explain. 2. Do all points along the minute hand of a clock expe- rience the same centripetal acceleration? Explain. 3. If the speed of a particle in circular motion is increasing, is the net acceleration of the particle still directed toward the centre of the circle? Use a diagram to explain your answer. 4. A civil engineer has calculated that the magnitude of the maximum centripetal acceleration of a car on a certain horizontal curve is 4.4 m/s2. What is the minimum radius of this curve for a car travelling at 25 m/s? 5. For the clock shown in Figure 1, calculate the magni- tude of the centripetal acceleration of the tip of the second hand, the minute hand, and the hour hand. 12 10 1 2 9.8 cm 6.0 cm 9 8.0 cm 6 4 5 Figure 1 6. A chicken is cooking on the rotating turntable of a microwave oven. The end of the drumstick, which is 16 cm from the centre of rotation, experiences a centripetal acceleration of magnitude 0.22 m/s2. Determine the period of rotation of the plate. 7. For each of the following situations, draw an FBD and name the force(s) causing the centripetal acceleration: (a) A truck travels, without sliding, around an unbanked curve on a highway. (b) A bus travels around a banked curve at the optimal speed for the banking angle. (c) A planet travels in an essentially circular orbit around the Sun. (d) A communications satellite travels in a circular orbit around Earth. NEL circle of radius 26 cm in the spin cycle of a washing machine. The frequency of rotation is 4.6 Hz. (a) Name the force causing the centripetal acceleration. What object exerts that force? (b) What is the speed of the towel? (c) Determine the magnitude of the centripetal force on the towel. 9. Neptune travels in a nearly circular orbit, of diameter 9.0 1012 m, around the Sun. The mass of Neptune is 1.0 1026 kg. The gravitational force of attraction between Neptune and the Sun has a magnitude of 6.8 1020 N. (a) What is the speed of Neptune? (b) Determine Neptune’s period of revolution around the Sun in Earth years. 10. Points A through E in Figure 2 represent a piece of cement experiencing centripetal acceleration in the vertical plane inside a rotating cement mixer. The mixer itself is in uniform circular motion. For each of the points A through E, draw an FBD of the piece of cement at that point, and state what forces cause the centripetal acceleration. E 3 8 7 8. A wet towel, of mass 0.65 kg, travels in a horizontal on of rotati ecti on dir 11 Unit 1 D C B A Figure 2 11. A 45.7-kg boy on a swing moves in a circular arc of radius 3.80 m. At the lowest position, the child’s speed reaches 2.78 m/s. Determine the magnitude of the tension in each of the two vertical support chains. 12. A sport utility vehicle, of mass 2.1 103 kg, travels in the horizontal plane around an unbanked curve of radius 275 m at a speed of 26 m/s, without sliding. (a) Determine the minimum coefficient of static friction between the tires and the road. (b) How would your answer in (a) be affected if the mass of the vehicle were greater because of the presence of heavy cargo? (c) How would your answer in (a) be affected if the curve were sharper (i.e., if its radius were smaller)? Circular Motion 159 13. A ball, of mass 0.23 kg, is attached securely to a string, then whirled at a constant speed in a vertical circle of radius 75 cm. (a) Draw FBDs of the ball at the top and the bottom of the circle. (b) Determine the magnitude of the tension in the string at the locations in (a) for which the speed of the ball is 3.6 m/s. (c) Calculate the minimum speed of the ball at the top of the path if it is to follow a complete circle. 20. The Canadarm2 is the robotic arm, designed and built in Canada, that services the ISS in its orbit 4.50 102 km above the surface of Earth. Although the mass of this arm is 1.80 103 kg, it can move masses as large as 1.16 105 kg on the ISS. (a) Determine the magnitude of the force of gravity acting on the maximum load for the arm. (b) If the arm had to move such a large mass here on the surface of Earth, it would break. Why does it not break in space? 14. In which of the following situations would it not be possible to determine the gravitational force of GmAmB attraction from the equation FG , if in r2 each case the masses and the radius r are provided? (a) Saturn and one of Saturn’s moons (b) two friends hugging (c) a ball moving in a parabola through the air and Earth (d) two textbooks standing together on a bookshelf 15. A spherical meteor approaches Earth from a great distance. By what factor does the force between Earth and the meteor increase when the distance between the centres of the two bodies decreases by a factor of 3.9? 16. At a certain distance above Earth’s surface, the gravi- tational force on a certain object is only 2.8% of its value at Earth’s surface. Determine this distance, expressing it as a multiple of Earth’s radius, rE. Applying Inquiry Skills 21. Suppose that you have determined the results in Table 1 while performing an investigation. Determine the new value for the centripetal force. Table 1 Data for Question 21 Before After mass 1 ball mass 3 balls radius 0.75 m radius 1.50 m frequency 1.5 Hz frequency 3.0 Hz centripetal force 8.0 units centripetal force ? units 22. A conical pendulum consists of a mass (the pendulum bob) that travels in a circle on the end of a string, tracing out a cone as in Figure 4. For the pendulum shown, m 1.50 kg, L 1.15 m, and v 27.5°. 17. Determine the magnitude of the gravitational force between two bowling balls, each of mass 1.62 kg, if the centres are separated by 64.5 cm. v L 18. The orbit of Venus is approximately circular. The masses of the Sun and Venus are 1.99 1030 kg and 4.83 1024 kg, respectively. The Sun-Venus distance is 1.08 108 km. Determine the centripetal acceleration of Venus. r 19. Given the data in Figure 3, calculate the net gravita- tional force on the Moon due to the gravitational forces exerted by Earth and the Sun. Figure 4 A conical pendulum to Earth (5.98 ⴛ 1024 kg) (a) Describe how you would investigate what factors affect the frequency of revolution of the pendulum. (b) Draw an FBD of the bob at the instant shown. What force causes the centripetal acceleration? r = 3.84 ⴛ 105 km r = 1.49 ⴛ 108 km to Sun Moon (1.99 ⴛ 1030 kg) (7.35 ⴛ 1022 kg) 160 Chapter 3 Figure 3 NEL Unit 1 (c) Calculate the speed of the bob. (d) Determine the frequency of the bob. teacher rope 23. How would the device in Figure 4 of the Chapter 3 introductory Try This Activity have to be modified to make it work aboard the ISS? Explain your answer. 24 m 24 m Making Connections 24. In April 2001, an automobile race on a 2.4-km oval racetrack in Fort Worth, Texas, was cancelled because of complaints of danger by the drivers. At the high speeds involved, the drivers experienced forces nearly twice as great as the forces on most racetracks. Find out why the racetrack was so dangerous and why the race was cancelled. Explain the physics of the situation, referring to the banking angle of the track and the net forces on the drivers. GO www.science.nelson.com Extension 25. Obtain the value of g at the surface of Earth using the motion of the Moon. Assume that the Moon’s period around Earth is 27 d 8 h and that the radius of its orbit is 60.1 times the radius (6.38 106 m) of Earth. 24 m Figure 5 28. A baseball player works out by slugging a baseball in an Olympic stadium. The ball hangs from a long, light vertical rod that is free to pivot about its upper end (P), as shown in Figure 6(a). The ball starts off with a large horizontal velocity, but the rod pulls it up in a big vertical circle and it coasts slowly over the top as shown. If we look at the ball on the way down, after the rod has swung through 270°, which of the vector arrows shown in Figure 6(b) gives the correct direction for the acceleration of the ball? Ignore air resistance and friction at the pivot. (a) P 26. Snoopy, in hot pursuit of the Red Baron, is flying his vintage warplane in a “loop-the-loop” path. His instruments tell him that the plane is level (at the bottom of the loop) and travelling at a speed of 180 km/h. He is sitting on a set of bathroom scales. He notes that the scales show four times his normal weight. What is the radius of the loop, in metres? down Sir Isaac Newton Contest Question 27. Your favourite physics teacher who is late for class attempts to swing from the roof of a 24-m high building to the bottom of an identical building using a 24-m rope as shown in Figure 5. She starts from rest with the rope horizontal, but the rope will break if the tension force in it is twice the weight of the teacher. How high is the swinging physicist above level when the rope breaks? (Hint: Apply the law of conservation of energy.) Sir Isaac Newton Contest Question (b) P 270º ball E A B C D start Figure 6 Sir Isaac Newton Contest Question NEL Circular Motion 161