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BabaBlast [244]
3 years ago
8

A bowling ball of mass and radius is launched down the alley with speed and no rotation. Kinetic friction with the floor, , slow

s the ball down and also causes it to rotate. In terms of and the given variables, Find the time, , before the ball is completely rolling without slipping. Find the velocity of the ball at this time.
Physics
1 answer:
lianna [129]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

Explanation:

Given that,

Mass of ball =M

Radius of ball is =R

Coefficient of kinetic friction =u

Initial speed of ball =Vo

The weight of the body acting downward is

W=Mg.

The normal reaction is acting upward and it is given as

From Newton law

N=W=mg

Frictional force is given as

Fr=µN

Fr= µmg

This is the only force on the x-axis

Then,

ΣF = ma

-Fr=ma

-µmg=ma

Divide through by m

a= -µg

The negative show that it is decelerating

So using equation of motion

V=u+at

Where V is final velocity,?

u is initial velocity =Vo

And a is acceleration =-µg

Then, the velocity at any point in time is given as

V = Vo - µgt

The angular acceleration that sets the ball rotating with increasing angular velocity in anticlockwise direction whose magnitude ω, at any instant t, is given by

ω = αt.

Also, V=ωR

V=αtR

To get angular acceleration

Further, the only force that produces a torque about the centre is fk. This torque is of magnitude fkR, acting in anticlockwise direction producing an anticlockwise angular acceleration, α, of the ball about its center given as

fk•R = Icm •α,

Icm for a sphere is 2/5MR²

µMg•R = (2/5)MR² α

Divide both side by MR

µg= (2/5)Rα

α = 5µg/2R.

From above

V = Vo - µgt, then, V=αtR

αtR= Vo - µgt

αtR + µgt= Vo

t(αR + µg)=Vo

t=Vo/(αR + µg)

Since α = 5µg/2R

t=Vo/( 5µg/2R • R + µg)

t = Vo/( 5µg/2+ µg)

t= Vo/(7µg/2)

t=2Vo/7µg

So, the time is given as

t = 2Vo/7µg

And the velocity at any time is given as

V = Vo - µgt,

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Una cámara fotográfica analógica (no digital) tiene dos lentes intercambiables. Uno de foco 55mm y el otro de 200 mm. Toma una f
Sergeu [11.5K]

Answer:

f = 55mm,     h ’= -9.89 cm

f = 200 mm,  h ’= 42.5 cm

Explanation:

For this exercise let's start by finding the distance to the image, using the equation of the constructor

         \frac{1}{f} = \frac{1}{p} + \frac{1}{q}

where f is the focal length, p and q are the distances to the object and image, respectively

lens with f₁ = 55mm = 0.55cm

         \frac{1}{q} = \frac{1}{f} - \frac{1}{p}

         \frac{1}{q_1} = \frac{1}{0.55} - \frac{1}{10}

          \frac{1}{q_1} = 1.718

          q₁ = 0.582 m

lens with f₂ = 200mm = 2m

           \frac{1}{q_2} =   \frac{1}{2} - \frac{1}{10}

            \frac{1}{q_2} = 0.4

            q₂ = 2.5 m

the magnification of a lens is given by

            m = \frac{h'}{h} = -  \frac{q}{p}

             h ’= - \frac{q}{p} \ h

let's calculate for each lens

f = 55mm

             h '= - 0.582 / 10 1.7

             h ’= 0.0989 m

             h ’= -9.89 cm

f = 200 mm

             h '= - 2.5 / 10 1.7

             h ’= -0.425 m

             h ’= 42.5 cm

The negative sign indicates that the image is real and inverted

4 0
3 years ago
What sort of trade-offs do you think engineers make between functionality, safety, and aesthetics when building a real bridge?
skelet666 [1.2K]
They make sure the bridge is functional and safe before the add the 
<span>aesthetics</span>
5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
An object is projected at 25m/s from the top of a building of height 50m. At the same instant,another object is projected from t
docker41 [41]

A) The objects have the same vertical position after 2 seconds

B) The objects have same vertical position at y = 30.4 m (but they do not collide since they have different x-position)

Explanation:

The motion of the first object along the vertical direction is a uniformly accelerated motion, so we can write its position at time t using the following equation:

y_1(t)=h+u_1 t + \frac{1}{2}gt^2

where:

h = 50 m is the initial height

u_1=0 is the initial vertical velocity (the object is projected horizontally, so the vertical velocity is zero at the beginning)

g=-9.8 m/s^2 is the acceleration of gravity

So, its vertical position can be rewritten as

y_1(t)=50-4.9t^2

The position of object 2 instead can be written as

y_2(t)=(u_2 sin \theta)t + \frac{1}{2}gt^2

where

u_2 sin \theta is the initial vertical velocity, where

u_2 = 50 m/s is the initial velocity

\theta=30^{\circ} is the angle of projection

Substituting, we get:

y_2(t)=(50)(sin 30^{\circ})t+\frac{1}{2}(-9.8)t^2=25t-4.9t^2

The two objects collide when their vertical position is the same, so:

y_1(t)=y_2(t)\\50-4.9t^2 = 25t-4.9t^2

And solving for t, we find:

50=25t\\t= 2 s

Note that this means that the two object at t = 2 s have the  same vertical position: however, this is not true for the horizontal position.

B)

In order to find the point where they collide, we have to substitute the time of the collision that we found in part A into one of the expressions of the vertical position.

Substituting into the expression of object 2, we find:

y_2(t) = 25t-4.9t^2=25(2.0)-4.9(2.0)^2=30.4 m

We can verify that at the same time, the vertical position of object 1 is the same:

y_1(t)=50-4.9t^2=50-4.9(2.0)^2=30.4 m

This means that the two objects have the same vertical position at 30.4 m.

However, in reality, the two objects do not collide. In fact, object 1 is moving in the horizontal direction with constant velocity

v_{1x}=25 m/s

So its horizontal position at t = 2.0 s is

x_1(2.0)=v_{1x}t=(25)(2.0)=50 m

While object 2 is moving in the horizontal plane with velocity

v_{2x}=u_2 cos \theta=(50)(cos 30^{\circ})=43.3 m/s

So its horizontal position  at t = 2.0 s is

x_2(2.0)=v_{2x}t=(43.3)(2.0)=86.6 m

So in reality, the two objects do not collide, if they start from the same x-position.

Learn more about projectile motion:

brainly.com/question/8751410

#LearnwithBrainly

7 0
3 years ago
Air having a pressure of 40 psig and a volume of 8 cu ft expands isothermally to a pressure of 10 psig. Find the external work p
DerKrebs [107]

Answer:

357.6 lb-ft

Explanation:

V = Volume = 8 ft³

dP = Change in pressure = (40-10) = 30 psig

Work done is given by

W=VdP\\\Rightarrow W=8\times (40-10)\\\Rightarrow W=240\ psig.ft^3

30\ psig=44.7\ psi\\\Rightarrow 1\ psi=\dfrac{30}{44.7}

So, converting to ft-lb

\dfrac{240}{\dfrac{30}{44.7}}=357.6\ lb-ft

The external work performed during the expansion is 357.6 lb-ft

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Riding a bicycle and using of wheelbarrow (kariton) are example of
ruslelena [56]
Im pretty sure its Rolling friction also know as rolling resistance
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3 years ago
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