pi-ka-chew
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- Apr 2, 2009
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- 2010
A car moves along a straight road from its front gate, where it is initially stationary. During the first 10s, it has a constant acceleration of 2m/s^2, it has zero acceleration during the next 30 seconds, and it decelerates at 1m/s^2 for the final 20 s.
how far does the car go altogether?
so i said that:
during first 10s, v = 2t
during next 30s, v = c (where c is a constant, and i'm not sure if this works, but since in the 10th second, it reaches a velocity of 20m/s, this c = 20)
during last 20s, v = -t
i guess i did this the long way, but i plugged in t = 1,2...,10 and obtained the velocities and hence distance. e.g. when t = 1, v = 1, so d =1, when t = 2, v=4 so d = 4. i'm not sure if i'm doing this correctly. the final answer i got is 110 (first 10s)+ 600(next 30) + 190(last 20) = 900
and althought the answer is 900, but based on the answers, it should be 100+600+200 = 900.
*note: physics formulae cannot be used*
thanks for your help!
how far does the car go altogether?
so i said that:
during first 10s, v = 2t
during next 30s, v = c (where c is a constant, and i'm not sure if this works, but since in the 10th second, it reaches a velocity of 20m/s, this c = 20)
during last 20s, v = -t
i guess i did this the long way, but i plugged in t = 1,2...,10 and obtained the velocities and hence distance. e.g. when t = 1, v = 1, so d =1, when t = 2, v=4 so d = 4. i'm not sure if i'm doing this correctly. the final answer i got is 110 (first 10s)+ 600(next 30) + 190(last 20) = 900
and althought the answer is 900, but based on the answers, it should be 100+600+200 = 900.
*note: physics formulae cannot be used*
thanks for your help!