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PPT Dynamics Test Bank 1) If a = 2d/t2, solve for t2. t2 = 2) If d = at2/2, solve for 2. 2= 3) 2.2 lb / 1 kg = w lb / x kg. Solve for x. x kg = 4) 8 km/5 mi = p km/x mi. x mi = 5) How fast are you going? 6) How fast is a car moving? 7) When you're riding in a car, how fast are you moving? 8) If you kicked a ball into the air, and there was no gravity and no air resistance, what would happen to the ball? a) It would curve. b) It would slow down. c) It would keep going at a constant velocity. d) It would keep going in a straight line. e) It would keep going at the same speed. 9) If a basketball player shot the ball, but there was no gravity or air resistance, what would happen to the ball after it left the player's hand? 10) When you're in a car and the car turns a corner, you tend to tip to the side. This is due to a) your inertia. b) the car's speed. c) the car's mass. d) all of the above e) none of the above. 11) When you're in a car and the car starts up from a red light, you feel like you're pressed back into your seat. What property does this illustrate? 12) Aristotle observed that all objects tend to come to a stop eventually, so he theorized that they did so because it was their nature to stop moving. He knew they needed a force to start moving. What force was Aristotle missing that Galileo found, allowing Galileo to come up with the concept of inertia? 13) Aristotle believed in natural motion, that objects move to their natural state and stay there unless moved by a force. Rocks, for example, fall down because they are earth. What concept was Aristotle missing that Galileo found, allowing Galileo to come up with the concept of inertia? a) force b) velocity 840983964 dk 1 PPT Dynamics Test Bank c) friction d) mass e) acceleration 14) Why is it the "natural motion" for objects to stop moving? 15) If an object is changing speed, what do you know about the forces on it? 16) When a 50 kg person stands on a bathroom scale, what is the net force on the scale? 17) If a 1,000 kg car goes 100 m straight down the road in 10 s while traveling at a constant 10 m/s, what is the net force on it? 18) If you pull a 50 kg box with 200 N of force, and it doesn't move, what is the force of friction on the box? 19) If you pull on a 10 kg box with 1 N of force, and the box doesn't move, how much friction is on the box? a) 0.1 N b) 1 N c) 9.8 N d) 10 N e) 98 N 20) Name something that operates without friction. 21) What kind of mechanical objects work with no friction? 22) A vector has a) direction b) force c) magnitude d) acceleration e) magnitude and direction 23) What two features does a vector have? 24) Draw a picture of an airplane. It has a mass of 2,000 kg. It is flying at 400 kph. The air resistance is 1,200 N, and the engines are putting out a force of 1,400 N. Draw and label the vectors for velocity, air resistance, and engine force. Calculate the acceleration, then draw and label the vector for acceleration. 25) Draw a picture of a car driving at 30 kph. The car has a mass of 1000 kg. The air resistance is 500 N, the road friction is 600 N, and the driving force is 1500 N. Draw and label the force vectors. Draw and label the velocity vector. Calculate, then draw and label 840983964 dk 2 PPT Dynamics Test Bank the acceleration vector. 26) When is an object not in equilibrium? a) When it is moving. b) When the net force on it is not zero. c) When ∑F = 0. d) When it is moving at a constant velocity. e) When it is not moving. 27) Can a moving object be in equilibrium? If so, how does that happen? 28) If an object moves in a curved path, there is not a) a net force of zero. b) an acceleration. c) a force on it. d) a change in velocity. e) all of the above. 29) If a car goes around a corner at a constant speed, is it accelerating? 30) A bicyclist is riding at a constant velocity of 6 m/s. The force of road resistance is 12 N, and air resistance is 18 N. What force is the bicyclist producing? a) 6 N b) 12 N c) 30 N d) 600 N e) 630 N 31) If the force of road resistance is 25 N, and air resistance is 24 N, what force must a bicyclist produce to maintain a constant speed of 7 m/s? 32) If you apply a net force of 10 N to a 10 kg rock, how fast will it accelerate? a) 9.8 m/s2 b) 1 N c) 1 m/s d) 1 m/s2 e) not enough information 33) If you apply a net force of 20 N to a 4 kg rock, what will its acceleration be? 34) If you double the force on an object and cut the mass in half, its acceleration will a) be 1/4 as much b) be 1/2 as much c) stay the same d) be 2 times as much 840983964 dk 3 PPT Dynamics Test Bank e) be 4 times as much 35) If you double the force on an object and double its mass too, what will happen to its acceleration? 36) If you apply a net force of 100 N to a 10 kg rock, how fast will it accelerate? a) 0.1 m/s2 b) 1 m/s2 c) 10 m/s2 d) 100 m/s2 e) 1,000 m/s2 37) Two people push on a car in the same direction. One pushes with 200 N of force, and the other pushes with 300 N. The car has a mass of 1,500 kg. Neglecting friction, how fast will the car accelerate? 38) What net force is required to accelerate a 1,000 kg car at 20 m/s2? a) 0.02 N b) 50 N c) 980 N d) 20,000 N e) 40,000 N 39) What net force is required to accelerate a 1,000 kg car at 5 m/s2? 40) If you apply a 200 N net force to an object and it accelerates at 4 m/s2, what is its mass? a) 20 g b) 20 kg c) 50 g d) 50 kg e) 800 kg 41) If you apply a 490 N net force to an object and it accelerates at 10 m/s2, what is its mass? 42) If your car has a mass of 2,000 kg, and you want it to go 1 km in 5 s, starting from rest, how much force must it put out? (Ignore friction and air resistance.) a) 10,000 N b) 80,000 N c) 100,000 N d) 160,000 N e) 200,000 N 43) If your car has a mass of 1,500 kg, and you want it to go 1 km in 10 s, starting from rest, how much force must it put out? (Ignore friction and air resistance.) 840983964 dk 4 PPT Dynamics Test Bank 44) If your weight on Earth is 900 N, what is your approximate mass? 45) If your mass is 59 kg, what is your approximate weight on Earth (expressed in N)? 46) If you increase the net force on an object and you also increase its mass, what will happen to its acceleration? a) the acceleration will decrease b) the acceleration will stay the same c) the acceleration will increase d) the acceleration will double e) not enough information to tell 47) If you drop two objects of different masses, which will accelerate faster (ignore air resistance)? 48) A parachutist jumps out of a plane. The mass of the parachutist and all her equipment is 100 kg. As she falls, she gains speed. At one instant, before reaching terminal velocity, her instantaneous net acceleration is 5 m/s2. What is the force of air resistance on her at that instant? 49) Describe mass, weight, and the differences between them. 50) An object can not exert a force on a) another object b) something that accelerates c) something that doesn't move d) nothing e) something that moves at a constant speed 51) What is the minimum number of objects in order for a force to exist? 52) If you push on a car and it starts to move a) you are pushing harder on it than it is on you. b) it is pushing harder on you than you are on it. c) the car is pushing on you equally as hard as you are pushing on it. d) it is impossible to tell which is pushing harder. e) the net force on the car equals zero. 53) If you throw a baseball, do you apply more force to the baseball, or does the baseball apply more force to you? 54) What two properties of matter are directly proportional to mass? 840983964 dk 5 PPT Dynamics Test Bank 55) The force of gravity between Earth and the sun is about 41022 N. If Earth was twice as far from the sun, about what would the force of gravity between them be? 56) If your weight on Earth is 800 N, and if you went up in a rocket so that you were orbiting 6,371 km above the surface of Earth, what would the force of Earth's gravity on you be? 57) Briefly state all three of Newton's Laws of Motion. 58) What is the most accurate definition of force? a) push or pull b) gravity c) stress d) ma e) friction 59) In physics, what is the definition of force? 60) If you dropped a ball on Mercury, how fast would it be traveling after falling 5 m? 61) What is the weight of a 1,000 kg cow on Earth? 62) If you triple the mass of an object, what happens to its gravity? 63) If Earth had three times its mass, but was the same size, and you had twice the mass you do now, by what factor would your weight change? Explain. 64) Earth has a radius of 6,371 km. How many meters up from the surface of Earth would you have to go to weigh 1/4 as much as you do now? 65) Two steel balls are near each other. If everything else stayed the same, but you made the little one twice as big, the other three times as big, and you placed them three times as far apart, by what factor would the gravitational force between them change? 66) Explain why objects all fall at the same rate, neglecting air resistance. 67) What is the minimum number of objects in order for a force to exist? Explain. 68) Identify at least 4 action-reaction pairs in the picture. 840983964 dk 6 PPT Dynamics Test Bank 69) As you sit in your chair, name two equal and opposite forces which are not an actionreaction pair. 840983964 dk 7 PPT Dynamics Test Bank # 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Answer Concept 3 variables 3 variables proportions 2 t = 2d/a 2 = at2/d x kg = w lbkg/2.2 lb, or x kg = w kg / 2.2 x mi = p km5/8 Relative to what? Relative to what? proportions motion is relative motion is relative 10. c It would continue at the same speed in a straight line. a 11. inertia 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. friction c Because of friction The sum of forces is not zero. Zero. The scale is in equilibrium. Zero. It is traveling at a constant velocity. 200 N 19. b 20. There isn't anything that operates without friction. 21. There isn't anything that operates without friction. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. e magnitude and direction The acceleration is 0.1 m/s2 The acceleration is 0.4 m/s2 b Yes, when Fnet = 0. Or ∑F = 0. a Yes c 49 N d 5 m/s2 e The acceleration won't change. 840983964 dk 8 inertia - no outside forces inertia - no outside forces inertia, acceleration, friction inertia, acceleration, friction friction friction friction acceleration equilibrium equilibrium friction, static equilibrium, ∑F=0 friction, static equilibrium, ∑F=0 friction - you can't get away from it friction - you can't get away from it vectors vectors vectors, a=F/m vectors, a=F/m equilibrium, ∑F=0 equilibrium, ∑F=0 acceleration and force acceleration and force dynamic equilibrium, ∑F=0 dynamic equilibrium, ∑F=0 a=F/m a=F/m a=F/m, aF, a1/m a=F/m, aF, a1/m PPT # 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 840983964 dk Dynamics Test Bank Answer Concept c 0.33 m/s2 d 5,000 N c 49 kg d 30,000 N 90 kg, or 91.8 kg 590 N e They will accelerate the same. 500 N Mass is always the same - the amount of stuff. Weight is a force. It is the product of mass and acceleration, ma (mg on Earth). Weight changes depending on the gravity. d two c Neither. The forces are equal and opposite. Inertia and gravity 11022 N 200 N 1st - inertia. Objects will have a constant velocity unless a force acts on them. 2nd - Fnet=ma. a F, a 1/m. 3rd - action-reaction. If an object exerts a force on another object, the 2nd object exerts an equal and opposite force on the 1st. d force = mass acceleration a=F/m a=F/m action-reaction F=ma action-reaction m=F/a F=ma a=2d/t2, F=ma weight, wt=F/g weight, wt=F/g a=F/m a=F/m F = ma mass and weight 10,000 N It triples. 6. Earth would pull three times as hard, and I would pull twice as hard. F = Gmm/d2 6371 m 2/3 Because F is proportional to m. If you double the mass, the inertia (resistance to acceleration) doubles, but the force that causes acceleration doubles, too. F = ma F = Gmm/d2 F mm 9 m=F/a action-reaction action-reaction action-reaction mass g1/d2 g1/d2 Newton's Laws of Motion a=2d/t2, F=ma force F 1/d2 F = Gmm/d2 a = F/m PPT # 67. 68. 69. 840983964 dk Dynamics Test Bank Answer Two. Newton’s 3 Law. An object can’t exert a force on nothing Hammer-hands, hands-hammer; feet-floor, floorfeet; computer-table, table-computer; table-floor, floor-table; glasses-nose, nose-glasses; Earth-me, chair-me rd 10 Concept action-reaction action-reaction action-reaction