Homework Set 6 Solutions

Physics 101

 

Projects:

Chapter 8:

Project 3: When you bend over to touch your toes, your head and shoulders move forward of your feet.  This means that, in order to keep your center of gravity over your feet, your hips have to move behind your feet.  You need to be standing away from the wall so there is room for your hips to move backwards.

 

The average man has more of his weight in his shoulders and less of his weight in his hips than the average woman.  Thus, the average man has a higher center of gravity than the average woman, even if they are the same height.

 

This means that his hips have to move farther back to compensate for his heavier shoulders.  A woman’s hips do not have to move as far backward since her shoulders are lighter.

 

Thus, if a man and a woman are the same height, the woman will be able to touch her toes when standing closer to the wall. 

 

Project 4: When you stand, your center of gravity is over your feet.  When you stand on tiptoe, your center of gravity has to move forward so it is over your toes.  This means that about half of your weight has to be in front of your toes and half of your weight has to be behind your toes.  However, the wall is in the way so you cannot move half your weight in front of your toes.

 

Exercises:

Chapter 7:

40: KE = ˝ mv^2.  Let’s put in some numbers.  Assume a mass of 1 kg.  Then

KE(10) = ˝ * 1 kg * (10 km/h)^2 = 50 kg km^2/h^2

KE(20) = ˝ * 1 kg * (20 km/h)^2 = 200 kg km^2/h^2

KE(30) = ˝ * 1 kg * (30 km/h)^2 = 450 kg km^2/h^2

When the car went from 10 to 20 km/h, its kinetic energy increased by 150.  When it went from 20 to 30 km/h, its KE increased by 250.  Thus, KE increases more from 20 to 30 km/h than from 10 to 20 km/h.

 

44: There are two, equally valid ways to explain this.  One is using Work-Energy, the other uses Torque.

 

Work-Energy:  With long-handled bolt cutters, you apply a small force over a large distance as you bring the handles closer together.  This applies a Large force over a small distance to cut the bolt.  The work done by you on the bolt cutters is the same as the work done by the bolt cutters on the bolt.  With a scissors, you apply a larger force to the handles over a smaller distance so that the blades apply a smaller force over a larger distance (to cut the paper more quickly).  The work done by you on the scissors is the same as the work done by the scissors on the paper.

 

Torque description:  When you are cutting a bolt with the bolt cutters, the bolt cutters are moving slowly so they have a very small angular acceleration so the net torque is almost zero.  You apply a torque with a small force at a large moment arm.  This is counterbalanced by the torque exerted by the bolt on the bolt cutter which is a large force at a small moment arm.  The two torques are the same.

 

48: If your combined work and heat output is less than the energy in the food you eat, you will store the excess energy in the form of fat.  You will gain weight.  If your combined work and heat output is more than the energy in the food you eat, you will need to get extra energy from your body.  You will metabolize fat and when you run out of fat, you will metabolize muscle and other tissue.  You will lose weight.  An undernourished person cannot do more work without eating more food.  The extra energy must come from somewhere.

 

Chapter 8:

2: This problem focuses on the difference between rotational (or angular) speed and linear (or tangential) speed.   Because the two wheels are connected by the belt (just like the gears on your bicycle), the rims of the two wheels have the same linear (or tangential) velocity.  That means that the smaller wheel must rotate more than the bigger wheel for the same linear distance.  If the small wheel is half the diameter of the larger wheel, then it must have twice the rotational speed to have the same linear speed.

 

4: This is exactly the same problem as number 2.  Because the two bikes are traveling at the same velocity, the two wheels are traveling at the same linear speed.  The smaller diameter tires thus need to have a larger rotational velocity to have the same linear speed.  Sue’s bike’s tires have a larger rotational speed.

 

6: A CD is scanned by a laser beam that focuses on one spot on the CD at a time.  When the laser is focused at a spot near the rim of the CD, that spot needs to have a tangential velocity of 130 cm/s.  At that time, the CD must rotate with a certain rotational speed.  When the laser is focused at a spot near the center of the CD, that spot needs to have a tangential velocity of 130 cm/s.  In order for the spot near the center to have this tangential speed, the CD must rotate more times per second. 

 

(In other words, this problem is identical to problems 2 and 4.  All three problems ask about the relative rotational speeds of wheels with large and small radii [or in this case, a point at large radius and a point at small radius] when the wheels are traveling with the same linear velocity.)

 

10: When you walk along the top of a fence, holding your arms out increases your rotational inertia.  This will decreases your rotational acceleration, increasing the time you have to react if you start falling.

 

Problems:

Chapter 8:

2: The passenger on the Ferris wheel travels once around the entire circumference in 30 s.  Since the radius is 10 m, the circumference = 2 pi r = 2 * 3.14 * 10 m = 63 m.  Thus the linear speed is s = d/t = 63 m / 30 s = 2.1 m/s.

 

Estimation:

The highest mountain in Virginia Beach is Mt Trashmore at 62 feet in
elevation.  This is exactly 18.9 m or approximately 20 m.  My weight
is about 175 pounds which is a mass of about 80 kg.  Therefore
PE = mgh = 80 kg * 10 m/s^2 * 20 m = 16,000 J = 1.6 * 10^4 J
at 4000 J/food calorie, this is
PE = 1.6*10^4 J * (1 calorie / 4000 Joules) = 4 food calories
This is not a lot!

Now we can choose another mountain.  The highest mountain in Virginia
is about 5000 feet.  The highest mountain in the US is MT McKinley at
15 or 20 thousand feet.  The highest mountain in the world is Mt
Everest at 29,000 feet.  Any height between 3,000 ft (1000 m) and
30,000 ft (10,000 m) is a reasonable choice here.

I'll choose the highest mountain that I've climbed, which is 14,000
ft.  This is about 4300 m.  Now we have
PE = mgh = 80 kg * 10 m/s^2 * 4300 m
   = 3.4 * 10^6 J
   = 860 food calories
This is less than a Big Mac!

Note that your body is MUCH less than 100% efficient so it takes much
more energy to climb the mountain than just the increase in potential
energy.