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Physics Initial Questions |
reviews and helps assess the student's application of quantitative and reasoning skills in the context of some physical situations | more about how to think your way into and reason out a plausible answer to a question |
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If your solution to stated problem does not match the given solution, you should self-critique per instructions at
http://vhcc2.vhcc.edu/dsmith/geninfo/labrynth_created_fall_05/levl1_22/levl2_81/file3_259.htm
.
Your solution, attempt at solution. If you are unable to attempt a solution, give a phrase-by-phrase interpretation of the problem along with a statement of what you do or do not understand about it. This response should be given, based on the work you did in completing the assignment, before you look at the given solution.
006. Physics
Question:
`q001. There are two
parts to this problem. Reason them out
using common sense.
If the speed of an automobile changes by 2 mph every second,
then how long will it take the speedometer to move from the 20 mph mark to the
30 mph mark?
Given the same rate of change of speed, if the speedometer
initially reads 10 mph, what will it read 7 seconds later?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aIt will take 5 seconds to
complete the change. 30 mph - 20 mph =
10 mph change at 2 mph
per second (i.e., 2 mph every second) implies 5 seconds to go from 20 mph to
30 mph
Change in speed is 2 mph/second * 7 seconds = 14 mph Add
this to the initial 10 mph and the speedometer now reads 24 mph.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question: `q002. An automobile traveling down a hill passes a certain milepost traveling at a speed of 10 mph, and proceeds to coast to a certain lamppost further down the hill, with its speed increasing by 2 mph every second. The time required to reach the lamppost is 10 seconds.
It then repeats the process, this time
passing the milepost at a speed of 20 mph.
Will the vehicle require more or less than 10 seconds
to reach the lamppost?
Since its initial speed was 10 mph greater than before, does
it follow that its speed at the lamppost will be 10 mph greater than before?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aIf it starts coasting down the
same section of road at 20 mph, and if velocity changes by the same amount
every second, the automobile should always be traveling faster than if it
started at 10 mph, and would therefore take less than 10 seconds.
The conditions here specify equal distances, which implies
less time on the second run. The key is
that, as observed above, the automobile has less than 10 seconds to increase
its speed. Since its speed is changing
at the same rate as before and it has less time to change it will therefore
change by less.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question:
`q003. The following
example shows how we can measure the rate at which an automobile speeds
up: If an automobile speeds up from 30
mph to 50 mph as the second hand of a watch moves from the 12-second position
to the 16-second position, and its speed changes by 20 mph in 4 seconds. This gives us an average rate of velocity change
equal to 20 mph / 4 seconds = 5 mph / second.
We wish to compare the rates at which two different
automobiles increase their speed:
Which automobile speeds up at the greater rate, one which
speeds up from 20 mph to 30 mph in five seconds or one which speeds up from 40
mph to 90 mph in 20 seconds?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
The first automobile's speed
changes from 20 mph to 30mph, a 10 mph
difference, which occurs in 5 seconds.
So the rate of chage in 10 mph / (5 sec) = 2
mph / sec. = rate of change of 2 mph per second.
The second automobile's speed changes from 40 mph to 90 mph, a 50 mph difference in 20 seconds so the rate of change is 50 mph / (20 sec) = 2.5 mph per second.
Therefore,
the second auto is increasing its velocity ar a rate
which is .5 mph / second greater than that of the first.
Self-critique:
Self-critique Rating:
Question:
`q004. If an automobile
of mass 1200 kg is pulled by a net force of 1800
Which team will win and why?
If someone pulled
with a force of 500
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aThe first team's rate is 3000 Newtons divided by 1500 kg or 2 Newtons
per kg, while the second team's rate is 5000 Newtons
divided by 2000 kg or 2.5 Newtons per kg. The second team therefore increases velocity
more quickly. Since both start at the
same velocity, zero, the second team will immediately go ahead and will stay
ahead.
The second team would still win even if the first team was
hampered by the 500 Newton resistance, because 5000 Newtons
- 500 Newtons
= 4500 Newtons of force divided by 2000 kg of
car gives 2.25 Newtons per kg, still more than the 2 Newtons / kg of the first team
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question:
`q005. Both the mass
and velocity of an object contribute to its effectiveness in a collision. If a 250-lb football player moving at 10 feet
per second collides head-on with a 200-lb player moving at 20 feet per second
in the opposite direction, which player do you precidt
will be moving backward immediately after the collision, and why?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aGreater speed and greater mass
both provide advantages. In this case
the player with the greater mass has less speed, so we have to use some
combination of speed and mass to arrive at a conclusion.
It turns out that if we multiply speed by mass we get the
determining quantity, which is called momentum. 250 lb * 10 ft/sec = 2500 lb ft
/ sec and 200 lb * 20 ft/sec = 4000 lb ft / sec, so the second player will
dominate the collision.
In this course we won't use pounds as units, and in a sense
that will become apparent later on pounds aren't even valid units to use
here. However that's a distinction we'll
worry about when we come to it.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question:
`q006. Two climbers eat
Cheerios for breakfast and then climb up a steep mountain as far as they can
until they use up all their energy from the meal. All other things being equal, who should be
able to climb further up the mountain, the 200-lb climber who has eaten 12
ounces of Cheerios or the 150-lb climber who has eaten 10 ounces of Cheerios?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aThe comparison we make here is
the number of ounces of Cheerios per pound of body weight. We see that the first climber has 12 oz /
(200 lb) = .06 oz / lb of weight, while the second has 10 0z / (150 lb) = .067
oz / lb. The second climber therefore
has more energy per pound of body weight.
It's the ounces of Cheerios that supply energy to lift the
pounds of climber. The climber with the
fewer pounds to lift for each ounce of energy-producing Cheerios will climb
further.
STUDENT COMMENT
I am satisfied with how I worked out the problem, though it
would be nice to know what formulas to use in case my instinct is wrong. I
should have got the energy used per pound by rereading the question.
INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE
There are two points to these problems:
1. You can go a long ways with common sense, intuition or instinct, and you
often don't need formulas.
2. Common sense, intuition and instinct aren't the easiest things to apply
correctly, and it's really easy to get things turned around.
A corollary: When we do use formulas it will be important to understand them, as
best we can, in terms of common sense and experience.
Either way, practice makes the process easier, and one of the great benefits of
studying physics is that we get the opportunity to apply common sense in
situations where we can get feedback by experimentally testing our thinking.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question:
`q007. Two automobiles
are traveling up a long hill with an steepness that
doesn't change until the top, which is very far away, is reached. One automobile is moving twice as fast as the
other. At the instant the faster
automobile overtakes the slower their drivers both take them out of gear and they coast until they stop.
Which automobile will take longer to come to a stop? Will that automobile require about twice as
long to stop, more than twice as long or less than
twice as long?
Which automobile will
have the greater average coasting velocity?
Will its average coasting velocity by twice as great as the other, more
than twice as great or less than twice as great?
Will the distance traveled by the faster automobile be equal
to that of the slower, twice that of the slower or more than twice that of the
slower?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aIt turns out that, neglecting
air resistance, since the slope is the same for both, both automobiles will
change velocity at the same rate. So in
this case the second would require exactly twice as long.
If you include air resistance the faster car experiences
more so it actually takes a bit less than twice as long as the slower.
For the same reasons as before, and because velocity would
change at a constant rate (neglecting air resistance) it would be exactly twice
as great if air resistance is neglected.
Interestingly if it takes twice as much time and the average
velocity is twice as great the faster car travels four times as far.
If there is air resistance then it slows the faster car down more at the beginning than at the end and the average velocity will be a bit less than twice as great and the coasting distance less than four times as far.
STUDENT COMMENT: I do not understand why the car would go four times as far as the slower car.
INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE: The faster car takes twice as long to come to rest, and have twice the average velocity.
If the car traveled at the same average velocity for twice as long it would go twice as far.
If it traveled at twice the average velocity for the same length of time it would go twice as far.
However it travels at twice the average velocity for twice as long, so it goes four times as far.
STUDENT COMMENT:
it’s hard to know this stuff without having first
discussed it in notes or read it in the book, or
have an equation handy. I guess this will all come with the class.
INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE
One purpose of this and similar exercises is to get students
into the habit of thinking for themselves, as opposed to imitating what they see
done in a textbook. You're doing some good thinking. When you get to the text
and other materials, ideally you'll be better prepared to understand them as a
result of this process.
This works better for some students than others, but it's beneficial to just
about everyone.
STUDENT COMMENT
I understand, it seems as though it would be easier if there
were formulas to apply. I used a little common sense on all but
the last one. Reading the responses I somewhat understand the last one. ?????The
problem doesn’t indicate the vehicle
travels twice the average velocity for twice as long. Should I have known that
by reading the problem or should that have
become clear to me after working it some?????
INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE
You did know these things when you thought about the problem.
You concluded that the automobile would take twice as long to come to rest, and that it would have twice the coasting velocity. You just didn't put the two conclusions together (don't feel badly; very few students do, and most don't get as close as you did).
You should now see how your two correct conclusions, when put
together using common sense, lead to the final conclusion that the second
automobile travels four times as far.
No formula is necessary to do this. In fact if students are given a formula,
nearly all will go ahead and use it without ever thinking about or understanding
what is going on.
In this course we tend to develop an idea first, and then summarize the idea
with one or more formulas. Once we've formulated a concept, the formula gives us
a condensed expression of our understanding. The formula then becomes a
means of remembering the ideas it represents, and gives us a tool to probe even
more deeply into the relationships it embodies.
There are exceptions in which we start with a formula, but usually by the time
we get to the formula we will understand, at least to some extent, what it's
about.
I suppose this could be put succinctly as 'think before formulating'.
STUDENT COMMENT
I feel that I did decent on the problem, but I am the student
that likes to have formulas. Your insight has opened my eyes to a different way
of looking at this problem. I like the comment “Think before Formulate”
INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE
Your solution was indeed well thought out.
I should probably add another comment:
'Think after formulating.'
Formulas are essential, but can't be applied reliably without the thinking,
which should come first and last.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question:
`q008. When a 100 lb
person hangs from a certain bungee cord, the cord stretches by 5 feet beyond
its initial unstretched length. When a person weighing 150 lbs hangs from the
same cord, the cord is stretched by 9 feet beyond its initial unstretched length.
When a person weighing 200 lbs hangs from the same cord, the cord is
stretched by 12 feet beyond its initial unstretched
length.
Based on these figures, would you expect that a person of
weight 125 lbs would stretch the cord more or less than 7 feet beyond its
initial unstretched length?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aFrom 100 lbs to 150 lbs the
stretch increased by 4 feet, from 150 lbs to 200 lbs the increase was only 3
feet. Thus it appears that at least in
the 100 lb - 200 lb rands each additional pound
results in less increase in length than the last and that there would be more
increase between 100 lb and 125 lb than between 125 lb and 150 lb. This leads to the conclusion that the stretch
for 125 lb would be more than halfway from 5 ft to 9 ft, or more than 7 ft.
A graph of stretch vs. weight would visually reveal the
nature of the nonlinearity of this graph and would also show that the stretch
at 125 lb must be more than 7 feet (the graph would be concave downward, or increasing at a decreasing rate, so the midway
stretch would be higher than expected by a linear approximation).
STUDENT COMMENT
I feel like I nailed this one. Probably just didn’t state
things very clearly.
INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE
You explanation was very good.
Remember that I get to refine my statements, semester after semester, year after
year. You get one shot and you don't have time to hone it to perfection (not to
say that my explanations ever achieve that level).
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question:
`q009. When given a
push of 10 pounds, with the push maintained through a distance of 4 feet, a
certain ice skater can coast without further effort across level ice for a
distance of 30 feet. When given a push
of 20 pounds (double the previous push) through the same distance, the skater
will be able to coast twice as far, a distance of 60 feet. When given a push of 10 pounds for a distance
of 8 feet (twice the previous distance) the skater will again coast a distance
of 60 feet.
The same skater is now accelerated by a sort of a slingshot
consisting of a bungee-type cord slung between two posts in the ice. The cord, as one might expect, exerts greater
and greater force as it is pulled back further and further. Assume that the force increases in direct
proportion to pullback (ie.g., twice the pullback implies twice the force).
When the skater is pulled back 4 feet and released, she
travels 20 feet. When she is pulled back
8 feet and released, will she be expected to travel twice as far, more than
twice as far or less than twice as far as when she was pulled back 4 feet?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aThe distance through which the
force acts will be twice as great, which alone would double the distance; because of the doubled pullback and the
linear proportionality relationship for the force the average force is also
twice as great, which alone would double the distance. So we have to double the doubling; she will
go 4 times as far
STUDENT COMMENT: I do not understand the linear proportionality relationship for the force.
If the skater is pulled back an extra four feet, does that
mean that the amount of pounds propelling her is also doubled?
INSTRUCTOR COMMENT: That is so. However the force propelling her isn't the
only thing that influences how far she slides. The distance through which the
force is applied is also a factor.
Doubling the force alone would double the sliding distance.
Doubling the distance through which the force is applied would double the
sliding distane.
Doubling both the applied force and the distance through which it is applied
quadruples the sliding distance.
STUDENT SOLUTION AND QUESTION
She should travel three times as far. The first four feet
pulled back yield 20 feet of travel. The second four feet (i.e., feet 5 through
8) will propel her with twice the force as the first four feet. So this
interval, by itself, would propel her 40 feet. The 20 feet of the first
four-foot interval plus the 40 feet of the second four-foot interval is 60 feet
total.
But wouldn’t it be the case that by the time the slingshot reaches the four-foot
position, the force exerted on the skater would only be half of that exerted
when she was eight feet out? I understand why it would be a multiplier of four
if the force were the same throughout, but I’m assuming that the force will
decrease as the slingshot is contracts.
I would appreciate help with this question. Thanks.
INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE
The average force for the entire 8-foot pull would be double the average force for the 4-foot pull. At this point we don't want to get too mathematical so we'll stick to a numerical plausibility argument. This argument could be made rigorous using calculus (just integrate the force function with respect to position), but the numerical argument should be compelling:
Compare the two pulls at the halfway point of each. For a
convenient number assume that the 4-foot pull results in a force of 100 lb. Then
the 8-foot pull will therefore exert a force of 200 lb.
When released at the 4-foot mark, the skater will be halfway back at the 2-foot
mark, where she will experience a 50-lb force.
When released at the 8-foot mark, the skater will be halfway back at the 4-foot
mark, where she will experience a 100-lb force.
Since the force is proportional to pullback, the halfway force is in fact the
average force.
Note that during the second 4 ft of the 8 ft pull the force goes from 100 lb to
200 lb, so the average force for the second 4 ft is 150 lb, three times as great
as the average force for the first 4 ft. The max force for the second 4 ft is
double that of the first 4 ft, but the second 4 ft starts out with 100 lbs of
force, while the first 4 ft starts out with 0 lbs.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question:
`q010. Two identical
light bulbs are placed
at the centers of large and identically frosted glass spheres, one of diameter
1 foot and the other of diameter 2 feet.
To a moth seeking light from half a mile away, unable to
distinguish the difference in size between the spheres, will the larger sphere
appear brighter, dimmer or of the same brightness as the first?
To a small moth
walking on the surface of the spheres, able to detect from there only the light
coming from 1 square inch of the sphere, will the second sphere appear to have
the same brightness as the first, twice the brightness of the first, half the
brightness of the first, more than twice the brightness of the first, or less
than half the brightness of the first?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aBoth bulbs send out the same
energy per second. The surface of the
second bulb will indeed be dimmer than the first, as we will see below. However the same total energy per second reaches
the eye (identically frosted bulbs will dissipate the same percent of the bulb
energy) and from a great distance you can't tell the difference in size, so
both will appear the same. The second
sphere, while not as bright at its surface because it has proportionally more
area, does have the extra area, and that exactly compensates for the difference
in brightness. Specifically the
brightness at the surface will be 1/4 as great (twice the radius implies 4
times the area which results in 1/4 the illumination at the surface) but there
will be 4 times the surface area.
Just as a 2' x 2' square has four times the area of a 1' x
1' square, a sphere with twice the diameter will have four times the surface
area and will appear 1 / 4 as bright at its surface. Putting it another way,
the second sphere distributes the intensity over four times the area, so the
light on 1 square inch has only 1 / 4 the illumination.
STUDENT COMMENT: I understand the first part of the
problem about the distances. But the second part really confuses me. Looking
straight down from the top of the spheres, the bulb is the same intensity and
the frosted glass is exactly the same, so why would it seem dimmer? I would
think that if a person was standing in front of the spheres, that person would
be able to tell a difference, but not extremely close.
INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE: Imagine a light bulb inside a frosted glass lamp of
typical size. Imagine it outside on a dark night. If you put your eye next to
the glass, the light will be bright. Not as bright as if you put your eye right
next to the bulb, but certainly bright. The power of the bulb is spread out over
the lamp, but the lamp doesn't have that large an area so you detect quite a bit
of light.
If you put the same bulb inside a stadium with a frosted glass dome over it, and
put your eye next to the glass on a dark night, with just the bulb lit, you
won't detect much illumination. The power of the bulb is distributed over a much
greater area than that of the lamp, and you detect much less light.
STUDENT COMMENT:
I also didn’t get the second part of the question. I still
don’t really see where the ¼ comes from.
INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE:
First you should address the explanation given in the problem:
'Just as a 2' x 2' square has four times the area of a 1' x
1' square, a sphere with twice the diameter will have four times the surface
area and will appear 1 / 4 as bright at its surface. Putting it another way,
the second sphere distributes the intensity over four times the area, so the
light on 1 square inch has only 1 / 4 the illumination.
Do you understand this explanation?
If not, what do you understand about it and what don't you understand?
This simple image of a 2x2 square being covered by four 1x1 squares is the most basic reason the larger sphere has four time the area of the smaller.
There is, however, an alternative explanation in terms of formulas:
The surface area of a sphere is 4 pi r^2.
If r is doubled, r^2 increases by factor 2^2 = 4.
So a sphere with double the radius has four time the area.
If the same quantity is spread out over the larger sphere, it will be 1/4 as dense on the surface.
STUDENT COMMENT:
I also have no clue why the extra area doesn’t take away some brightness.
INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE:
All the light produced by the bulb is passing through either of the spheres. From a distance you see all the light, whichever sphere you're looking at; you see just as much light when looking at one as when looking at the other.
From a distance you can't tell whether you're looking at the sphere with larger area but less intensity at its surface, or the sphere with lesser area and greater intensity at its surface.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question:
`q011. The water in a
small container is frozen in a freezer until its temperature reaches -20
Celsius. The container is then placed in
a microwave oven, which proceeds to deliver energy at a constant rate of 600
Joules per second. After 10 seconds the
ice is still solid and its temperature is -1 Celsius. After another 10 seconds a little bit of the
cube is melted and the temperature is 0 Celsius. After another minute most of the ice is
melted but there is still a good bit of ice left, and the ice and water
combination is still at 0 Celsius. After
another minute all the ice is melted and the temperature of the water has risen
to 40 degrees Celsius.
Place the following in order, from the one requiring the
least energy to the one requiring the most:
Increasing the temperature of the ice by
20 degrees to reach its melting point.
Melting the ice at its melting point.
Increasing the temperature of the water by 20 degrees after
all the ice melted.
At what temperature does it appear ice melts, and what is
the evidence for your conclusion?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
Since the temperature is the
same when a little of the ice is melted as when most of it is melted, melting
takes place at this temperature, which is 0 Celsius.
The time required to melt the ice is greater than any of the
other times so melting at 0 C takes the most energy. Since we don't know how much ice remains unmelted before the final minute, it is impossible to
distinguish between the other two quantities, but it turns out that it takes
less energy to increase the temperature of ice than of liquid water.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question:
`q012. Suppose you are
in the center of a long, narrow swimming pool (e.g., a lap pool). Two friends with kickboards, one at either end
of the pool, are using them to
push waves in your direction. Their
pushes are synchronized, and the crests of the waves are six feet apart as they
travel toward you, with a 'valley' between each pair of crests. Since your friends are at equal distances
from you the crests from both directions always reach you at the same instant,
so every time the crests reach you the waves combine to create a larger crest. Similarly when the valleys meet you
experience a larger valley, and as a result you bob up and down further than
you would if just one person was pushing waves at you.
Now if you move a bit closer to one end of the pool the peak
from that end will reach you a bit earlier, and the peak from the other end
will reach you a little later. So the
peaks won't quite be reaching you simultaneously, nor will the valleys, and you
won't bob up and down as much. If you
move far enough, in fact, the peak from one end will reach you at the same time
as the valley from the other end and the peak will 'fll
in' the valley, with the result that you won't bob up and down very much.
If the peaks of the approaching waves are each 6 inches
high, how far would you expect to bob up and down when you are at the center
point?
How far would you
have to move toward one end or the other in order for peaks to meet valleys,
placing you in relatively calm water?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aIf the two 6-inch peaks meet and
reinforce one another completely, the height of the 'combined' peak will be 6
in + 6 in = 12 in.
If for example you move 3 ft closer to one end you move 3 ft
further from the other and peaks, which are 6 ft apart, will still be meeting
peaks. [ Think
of it this way: If you move 3 ft closer
to one end you move 3 ft further from the other. This shifts your relative position to the two
waves by 6 feet (3 feet closer to the one you're moving toward, 3 feet further
from the other). So if you were meeting
peaks at the original position, someone at your new position would at the same
time be meeting valleys, with two peaks closing in from opposite directions. A short time later the two peaks would meet
at that point. ]
However if you move 1.5 ft the net 'shift' will be 3 ft and
peaks will be meeting valleys so you will be in the calmest water.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question: `q013. This problem includes some questions that are fairly straightfoward, some that involve more complicated considerations, and possibly some that can't be answered without additional information.
We're hoping for some correct answers, but we expect that few students coming into this course will be able to think correctly through every nuance of the more complex situations. On these questions we are hoping for your best thinking without being particularly concerned with the final answer.
A steel ball and a wood ball are both thrown upward and, between release and coming to rest at maximum height, both rise with the same average speed. If not for air resistance they would both come to rest at the same time, at the same height. However air resistance causes the wood ball to stop rising more quickly than the steel ball.
Each ball, having risen to its maximum height, then falls back to the ground.
Which ball would you expect to have the greater average velocity as it falls?
Which ball would you expect to spend the greater time falling?
Which ball would you expect to hit the ground first?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Question:
`q014. If you double the voltage
across a certain circuit you double the current passing through it. The
power required to maintain the circuit is equal to the product of the current
and the voltage. How many times as much power is required if the voltage
is doubled?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Self-critique Rating: