English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

What is the acceleration formula I would use to solve this problem?

Also what is the deceleration formula I would use on this problem:

Find the deceleration of a truck that goes from 30 m/s to rest in 6 seconds.

2007-01-18 07:03:11 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Physics

6 answers

The acceleration formula you would use would be:

final speed - beginning speed
_________________________
time

Then you plug in your numbers:

28 m/sec - 0 m/sec
_________________
7 sec

Do subtraction:

28 m/sec
________
7 sec

Do division:

Acceleration = 4 m/sec^2


There is no such thing as deceleration. Deceleration is just accelerating the opposite way. If you were going north and slowing down, that means you are accelerating south.

The formula you would use would be:

final speed - beginning speed
________________________
time

Plug in your numbers

0 m/sec - 30 m/sec
________________
6 sec

Do subtraction:

-30 m/sec
_________
6 sec

Do division:

Acceleration = -5 m/sec^2

suppose the truck was going west. Then this could also be written as:

Acceleration = 5 m/sec^2 east

because it is accelerating east.

2007-01-18 07:34:37 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

your question uses a really basic equation of non-uniform motion

a= (v2-v1)/t
In your case v2 = 28 m/s, v1 = 0 m/s, and t = 7 s
so a = (28-0)/7=4 m/s^2.

In Physics there is no such concept as "deceleration", rather we use "negative acceleration".
"Negative" because it is in the direction opposite to the direction of motion.

So the same formula applies: except that you have v1 = 30m/s, v2 = 0m/s and t = 6 s. Plug those values into the same equation and you get
a=(0-30)/6 = -5 m/s^2

so that truck accelerates at -5 m/s^2, and it is then "colloquially said" that it decelerates at 5 meters per second squared.

2007-01-18 07:22:27 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Acceleration and deceleration is the time rate of change of velocity.

So, subtract one velocity from the other and divide by the time. Remember that deceleration will be a negative value.

2007-01-18 07:16:25 · answer #3 · answered by wheresdean 4 · 0 2

You've learned above how to calculate the answers to your ?.

Please feel ENTIRELY free to use the word deceleration. It's a perfectly valid term listed in Webster's Dictionary as a term nomally objected to only by anal physics majors. Everyone else understands it intuitively.

2007-01-18 10:15:39 · answer #4 · answered by Steve 7 · 0 0

if it hurries up in a instantly line then 40m/s so all and diverse is ideal except the joker with the mph figure, 40m/s is 144kph it truly is in direction of 90mph than 60. If it curves then you definately do in basic terms not understand.

2016-10-15 10:08:02 · answer #5 · answered by ishman 4 · 0 0

vf=vi+at
28=0+7a
a=4m/s^2

2007-01-18 07:33:56 · answer #6 · answered by mezo 1 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers