A person jumps from a fourth story window 15.0 m above a firefighter’s safety net.
The survivor stretches the net 1.0 m before coming to rest, Fig. 3.
(a) What was the average deceleration experienced by the survivor when she was slowed
to rest by the net? (5)
First, we need to find the final velocity when the person was falling and the net caught them. Use SUVAT.
Given quantities:
s = - 15 m.
u = 0 m/s
a = - 9.8 "\\frac{m}{s^2}" (gravity)
v = ???
"v^2 = u^2 + 2as"
"v^2 = 0^2 + 2(-9.8)(15)"
Do the math and we should get that "v=\\pm\\sqrt{294}".
Common sense says that since the person is falling, their velocity should be negative,
so "v = -17.14643"
Now that we have the velocity, we can solve for the acceleration of the person when they're in the net.
SUVAT again.
s = 1.0 m.
u = -17.14643
v = 0 m/s (the net slows them to rest)
a = ???
"v^2 = u^2 + 2as"
"0^2 = (17.14643)^2 + 2*1.0*a"
Do math and you should get that "a = -147 m\/s^2" ,
but since they asked for deceleration (meaning negative acceleration) your final answer should be
"a = -147 m\/s^2" or "a = -150 m\/s^2" with sig figs.
Comments
Leave a comment