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23 July, 14:03

A jogger accelerates from rest to 3.0 m/s in 2.0 s. A car accelerates from 38.0 to 41.0 m/s also in 2.0 s. (a) Find the acceleration (magnitude only) of the jogger, (b) Determine the acceleration (magnitude only) of the car. (c) Does the car travel farther than the jogger during the 2.0 s? If so, how much farther?

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  1. 23 July, 14:19
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    a) The acceleration of the jogger is 1.5 m/s²

    b) the acceleration of the car is also 1.5 m/s²

    c) Yes, the car travels 76 m farther than the jogger.

    Explanation:

    a) The acceleration of an object is the variation of its velocity over time:

    a = final velocity - initial velocity / time

    for the jogger:

    a = 3.0 m/s - 0 m/s / 2.0 s = 1.5 m/s ²

    b) For the car:

    a = 41.0 m/s - 38.0 m/s / 2.0 s = 1.5 m/s²

    c) Let's see the position of the car after 2 seconds.

    The equation for the position of an accelerated object moving in a straight line is:

    x = x0 + v0 * t + 1/2 * a * t²

    Where:

    x = position of the car at time "t"

    x0 = initial position

    v0 = initial velocity

    t = time

    a = acceleration

    Let's consider x0 = 0 because the origin of the reference system is located where the car starts accelerating. Then:

    x = 38,0 m/s * 2 s + 1/2 * 1.5 m/s ² * (2.0 s) ²

    x = 79 m

    In the same way, we can calculate the position of the jogger:

    x = 0 m/s * t + 1/2 * 1.5 m/s ² * (2.0 s) ²

    x = 3 m

    The car travels 79 m - 3 m = 76 m farther than the jogger
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