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Tutorial 8 Work Energy

This document contains multiple physics problems related to work, energy, and power. It includes questions about work done by constant forces, kinetic energy, potential energy, conservation of mechanical energy, and power. The problems cover topics like work done on objects by gravitational force, lifting objects, and accelerating objects.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
4K views

Tutorial 8 Work Energy

This document contains multiple physics problems related to work, energy, and power. It includes questions about work done by constant forces, kinetic energy, potential energy, conservation of mechanical energy, and power. The problems cover topics like work done on objects by gravitational force, lifting objects, and accelerating objects.

Uploaded by

api-3827354
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Work and Energy

Problems

Work, Constant Force

1. How much work is done by the gravitational force when a 265-kg pile driver falls 2.80 m?

2. A 65.0-kg firefighter climbs a flight of stairs 20.0 m high. How much work is required?

3. A 1300-N crate rests on the floor. How much work is required to move it at constant speed (a) 4.0 m

along the floor against a friction force of 230 N, and (b) 4.0 m vertically?

4. How much work did the movers do (horizontally) pushing a 160-kg crate 10.3 m across a rough floor

without acceleration, if the effective coefficient of friction was 0.50?

5. A box of mass 5.0 kg is accelerated by a force across a floor at a rate of 2.0 m s 2 for 7.0 s. Find the

net work done on the box.

6. Eight books, each 4.3 cm thick with mass 1.7 kg, lie flat on a table. How much work is required to

stack them one on top of another?

Kinetic Energy; Work-Energy Principle

At room temperature, an oxygen molecule, with mass of 5.31× 10 −26 typically has a KE of about 6.12 × 10 −21 J.

How fast is the molecule moving?

How much work must be done to stop a 1250-kg car traveling at 105 km h ?

1. An 88-g arrow is fired from a bow whose string exerts an average force of 110 N on the arrow over a

distance of 78 cm. What is the speed of the arrow as it leaves the bow?

2. How high will a 1.85-kg rock go if thrown straight up by someone who does 80.0 J of work on it? Neglect

air resistance.

Potential Energy

1. A 7.0-kg monkey swings from one branch to another 1.2 m higher. What is the change in potential energy?

2. By how much does the gravitational potential energy of a 64-kg pole vaulter change if his center of mass

rises about 4.0 m during the jump?


3. A 1.60-m tall person lifts a 2.10-kg book from the ground so it is 2.20 m above the ground. What is the

potential energy of the book relative to (a) the ground, and (b) the top of the person’s head? (c) How is the

work done by the person related to the answers in parts (a) and (b)?

Conservation of Mechanical Energy

Jane, looking for Tarzan, is running at top speed ( 5.3 m s ) and grabs a vine hanging vertically from a tall

tree in the jungle. How high can she swing upward? Does the length of the vine affect your answer?

1. A novice skier, starting from rest, slides down a frictionless 35.0º incline whose vertical height is 185

m. How fast is she going when she reaches the bottom?

2. A sled is initially given a shove up a frictionless 28.0º incline. It reaches a maximum vertical height

1.35 m higher than where it started. What was its initial speed?

3. In the high jump, Fran’s kinetic energy is transformed into gravitational potential energy without the

aid of a pole. With what minimum speed must Fran leave the ground in order to lift her center of mass

2.10 m and cross the bar with a speed of 0.70 m s ?

 Power

1. How long will it take a 1750-W motor to lift a 315-kg piano to a sixth-story window 16.0 m above?

2. If a car generates 18 hp when traveling at a steady 88 km h , what must be the average force exerted

on the car due to friction and air resistance?

3. A 1400-kg sports car accelerates from rest to 95 km h in 7.4 s. What is the average power delivered

by the engine?

© 2005 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ.  All rights reserved.  This material is protected under all copyright laws as they 
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