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Interlude: Here’s a fairly common trait sought after in the personals: “Seeking… “Weight proportional to height.” What’s that supposed to mean? Is that a desirable trait? Proportionalities A B D C A = ? z 1.A/w 2.A/x 3.B/x 4.C/x 5.D/x 6.D/w y w x z A and z are bases of their respective (isosceles) triangles, i.e, they are “corresponding sides.” D is an “altitude” and so corresponds to x. s a r The ratio of surface areas A = ? a 1.R/r2 2. R2/r2 3. R2/r 4. R/r 5. r/R R A S The ratio of the sides of the square areas S/s = R/r since S is to R as s is to r. However the areas A = S2 and a = s2. Consider this block weighing “W” height, h weight, W This stack of 2 blocks height, 2h weighs how much? Are these blocks in proportion? 2W To scale proportionally height, h weight, W And this double-sized block weighs 1. 2W 2. 4W 3. 6W 4. 8W 5. 10W 6. 12W More generally, 2L 2w h L w 2h original =hwL volume new =(2h)(2w)(2L) volume = ( 8 )hwL =(8 original )( volume ) Is weight meant to be proportional to height? Weight (Height)3 Each 1% increase in height should correspond to a (1.01)3 = 1.03 3% increase in weight 5% increase in height (5’4” 5’7”) 15.2% gain in weight 10% increase in height (5’10” 6’5”) 30% gain in weight Easy to push Hard to push To produce the same amount of acceleration, need to push the car much harder! How much? Twice as much mass requires twice the force! 100 as much mass requires 100 the force! Fm If a lot of others join in, each contributing an additional force, the net force will be greater, and the acceleration greater. Fa together with F m can be combined consistently to give Newton’s 2nd Law F = ma Unveiled at yesterday’s International Auto Show in Detroit: The Toyota FT-HS is a 400-horsepower hybrid sports car its 3.5-liter V6 engine provide an acceleration of 0-to-60-miles-an-hour in 4 seconds v acceleration, a = t +60 miles/hour 4 seconds = 15 miles/hour sec +60 miles/hour 4 seconds miles/hour = 15 sec Notice 60 miles/hour is the same as miles 5280 feet feet 60 = 316800 hour 1 mile hour feet 316800 hour 1 hour feet = 88 3600 seconds sec So alternately +60 miles/hour 4 seconds = 22 feet/sec sec or 22 ft/sec2 14 lb. medicine ball Tennis ball Softball 2 ounces 6.5-7.0 oz. (57 grams) 112 times heavier than a tennis ball! 32 times heavier than a softball! If all 3 balls were released simultaneously, from the same height, they would reach ground 1. tennis ball first, medicine ball last. 2. medicine ball first, tennis ball last. 3. together at about the same time. A large boat whose maximum speed in still water is v1, tows a smaller boat whose maximum speed is the smaller v2. across the lake. If both outboard motors run together at full bore, the speed that they travel together with will be 1. the smaller value v1. 2. the larger value v2. 3. somewhere between v1 and v2. Falling objects accelerate down at agravity g 32 ft/sec2 9.8 m/sec2 more precisely: at sea level 9.80621 m/sec2 32.1725 ft/sec2 16.0 km (10 miles) above earth’s surface agravity drops to about 9.75 m/sec2 even skydivers experience a 9.8 m/sec2 32.5 km (20 miles) above earth’s surface agravity drops to about 9.70 m/sec2 even commercial jet carriers experience agravity only 1% under the value at sea level! North Pole San Francisco Denver agravity = 9.832 agravity = 9.800 agravity = 9.796 The gravitational force on an object decreases by about a millionth for every 3 meter (~10 feet) gain in elevation. An individual with a 50 kilogram mass weighs 500 Newtons (110 pounds) in New York City; but ~0.25 newton (1 ounce) less in mile-high Denver. If you drop an object (assuming its air resistance is negligible) it accelerates downward at g=9.8 m/sec2. If instead you throw it downward, its downward acceleration after release is A. B. C. <g =g >g Inclined Plane A ball rolling down an inclined plane has constant acceleration 12 22 32 42 52 Is the acceleration of the ball down the ramp 9.8 m/s2? A) yes B) no No! This ball is not in free fall. Gravity alone does not act on it. The inclined plane provides a force of support which affects the motion! A ball is thrown straight up and falls back to the ground. Which of the following is true about its velocity v and its acceleration a at the highest point in its path? A) v = 0 and a = 0 B) v 0, but a = 0 C) v = 0, but a 0 D) v 0 and a 0 E) cannot be determined At the highest point in its path, the ball momentarily comes to a stop, and so its velocity is zero. However, since the ball is in free fall, its acceleration is g = 9.8 m/s2 (at every moment). A ball is dropped from rest, and a bullet shot out of a gun, straight down. Neglecting air resistance, which has the greater acceleration just before hitting the ground? A) the ball B) the bullet C) both have the same acceleration The acceleration of gravity does not depend on the mass or the speed of the object in free fall! The maximum velocity, v, an object reaches falling freely from rest, is directly proportional to the time, t, of its fall: v t . 1) TRUE 2) FALSE How fast is an object moving at the end of a one second fall? How far does an object in freefall drop in one second?