BD HSG Ly Tieng Anh 2021 p3
BD HSG Ly Tieng Anh 2021 p3
BD HSG Ly Tieng Anh 2021 p3
This proves that the velocity of the ball is independent of its mass. It does not
matter what its mass is, it will always have the same velocity when it falls through
this height.
Calculate the velocity of the ball at point B
We can use the equation above, or do the calculation from “first principles”:
Calculate the velocity at the bottom of the loop: Again we can use the
conservation of energy and the total mechanical energy at the bottom of the loop
should be the same as the total mechanical energy of the system at any other position.
Let's compare the situations at the start of the roller coaster's trip and the bottom of
the loop:
4. AN INCLINED PLANE
A mountain climber who is climbing a mountain in the Drakensberg during
winter, by mistake drops her water bottle which then slides 100m down the side of a
steep icy slope to a point which is 10 m lower than the
climber's position. The mass of the climber is 60kg and
her water bottle has a mass of 500g .
1. If the bottle starts from rest, how fast is it
travelling by the time it reaches the bottom of the slope?
(Neglect friction.)
2. What is the total change in the climber's
potential energy as she climbs down the mountain to fetch her fallen water bottle?
i.e. what is the difference between her potential energy at the top of the slope and
the bottom of the slope?
Note: the distance that the bottle travelled (i.e. 100m) does not play any role in
calculating the energies. It is only the height difference that is important in
calculating potential energy.
Calculate the difference between the climber's potential energy at the top of the
slope and her potential energy at the bottom of the slope
At the top of the slope, her potential energy is:
Therefore the difference in her potential energy when moving from the top of
the slope to the bottom is:
4. EXCERCISES:
Ex 12: Determine
American ski jumper Lee
Ben Fardest's (a mass of
approximately 50 kg)
speed at locations B, C, D
and E.
Ex 13: A 0.14 kg baseball moves horizontally with a speed of 35 m/s towards the
bat. After striking the bat the ball moves vertically upward with half its initial speed.
Find the direction and magnitude of the impulse delivered to the ball by the bat.
Ex 14: A 10 kg block is sliding with a velocity of 5.0 m/s to the right on a frictionless
surface when it explodes into two pieces. After the explosion, piece A, with a mass
of 7.0 kg, is traveling 2 m/s to the left as shown in the figure below. Find the velocity
of piece B assuming that no mass is lost in the explosion.
Ex 15: A 150g projectile is fired with a velocity of +715 m/s at a 2.00 kg wooden
block that rests on a frictionless table. The velocity of the block, immediately after
the projectile passes through it, is +40.0 m/s. Find the velocity with which the
projectile exits from the block.
Ex 16: A small, 100.0 g cart is moving at 1.20 m/s on an air track when it collides
with a larger, 1.00 kg cart at rest. After the collision, the small cart recoils at 0.850
m/s. What is the speed of the large cart after the collision?
Ex 17: A 71 kg baseball player jumps straight up to catch a line drive. If the 140 g
ball is moving horizontally at 28 m/s, and the catch is made when the ballplayer is
at the highest point of his leap, what is his speed immediately after stopping the ball?
Ex 18: A completely inelastic collision occurs between two balls of wet putty that
move directly toward each other along a vertical axis. Just before the collision, one
ball, of mass 3.0 kg, is moving upward at 20 m/s and the other ball, of mass 2.0 kg,
is moving downward at 12 m/s. How high do the combined two balls of putty rise
above the collision point?
Ex 19: 10 g bullet moving horizontally at 375 m/s penetrates a 3 kg wood block
resting on a frictionless horizontal surface. If the bullet slows down to 300 m/s after
emerging from the block, what is the speed of the block immediately after the bullet
emerges.
Ex 20: Two balls with masses of 3.0 kg and 6.0 kg travel toward each other at speeds
of 12 m/s and 4.0 m/s, respectively. If the balls have a head-on inelastic collision
and the 3.0 kg ball recoils with a speed of 8.0 m/s, how much kinetic energy is lost
in the collision?
Ex 21: An object with velocity 1.4 m/s and mass 0.3 kg collides with an object whose
velocity is -2.5 m/s i and whose mass is 0.15 kg. The motion takes place in 1-
dimension. What are the final velocities of the objects if the collision is elastic? What
is the total kinetic energy in the collision?
Ex 22: A 300 g cart moves on an air track at 1.2 m/s. It collides with and sticks to
another cart of mass 500 kg, which was moving in the opposite direction at 0.8 m/s
before collision. What is the velocity of the combined cart after collision?