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Zula110100100
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I am having trouble working this out
If a 1kg object under constant acceleration, g, starts out at rest and over the course of .5 seconds traverses 1m winding up at rest again, can you deduce exactly force F that acted on it? Or only the impulse?
Given:
Δp = 0
Δke = 0
Δx = 1
Δt = .5
g = 9.8
unknowns:
F - the unknown force
t1 - time F was applied
x1 - distance F was applied
Equations:
gt = Ft1
gx = Fx1
That gives me x/t = x1/t1
and x1 = .5((F-g)/m)t12
I am having trouble working it out, but it seems at first glance that since x1= .5((F-g)/m)t12 is not linear there would be only 1 set of appropriate F, x1 and t1 that get me exactly 1m in .5s and back at rest. Any ideas?
If a 1kg object under constant acceleration, g, starts out at rest and over the course of .5 seconds traverses 1m winding up at rest again, can you deduce exactly force F that acted on it? Or only the impulse?
Given:
Δp = 0
Δke = 0
Δx = 1
Δt = .5
g = 9.8
unknowns:
F - the unknown force
t1 - time F was applied
x1 - distance F was applied
Equations:
gt = Ft1
gx = Fx1
That gives me x/t = x1/t1
and x1 = .5((F-g)/m)t12
I am having trouble working it out, but it seems at first glance that since x1= .5((F-g)/m)t12 is not linear there would be only 1 set of appropriate F, x1 and t1 that get me exactly 1m in .5s and back at rest. Any ideas?