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brotherbobby
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- Homework Statement
- A car driver going at some speed ##v## suddenly finds a wide wall at a distance ##r##. Should he apply brakes or turn the car in a circle of radius ##r## to avoid hitting the wall?
- Relevant Equations
- Kinematic equations : (1) ##v_x^2=v_{0x}^2+2a_{0x} (x-x_0)## and (2) ##x=x_0+v_{0x}t+\frac{1}{2}a_{0x}t^2##. Newton's 2nd Law : ##\Sigma \vec F = m \vec a##. Kinetic frictional force supporting circular motion on a road of radius ##r##: ##f_k = \mu_k mg = \frac{mv^2}{r}##
1. For the car to apply brakes, we have ##v^2=2ar⇒a=\frac{v^2}{2r}=μg\;\;[ma=μmg]⇒v=\sqrt{2μgr} ##
2. For the car to go in a circle ##\frac{mv^2}{r}=μmg\Rightarrow v=\sqrt{\mu gr}##.
We find from above that the maximum velocity ##v## possible to avoid a collision is ##\sqrt{2}## times as much if the car applied brakes than if it moved in a circle.
Which means that the car can afford to move with ##\sqrt{2}## times the speed if it applied brakes than if it moved in a circle in order to avoid collision.
Hence it would be better for it to apply brakes than take a circular turn. (My answer)
Am I correct?
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