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The force needed to keep a car from skidding on a curve varies jointly as theweight of the car and the square of the car’s speed and inversely as the radiusof the curve. If 126 lb of force keeps a 1200 lb car driving at 25 mph fromskidding on a curve of radius 400 ft, what force would keep the same car going45 mph from skidding on a curve of radius 650 ft?

asked
User Orzechow
by
8.2k points

1 Answer

2 votes

Answer:

F' = 251.2 lb

Step-by-step explanation:

It is given that,

The force needed to keep a car from skidding on a curve varies jointly as the weight of the car and the square of the car’s speed and inversely as the radius of the curve. So,


F=(kWv^2)/(r)

W is the weight

v is the speed

r is the radius of curve

W is constant, So


F=(kv^2)/(r)

If F = 126 lb, v = 25 mph and r = 400 ft

F' = ?, v' = 45 mph and r' = 650 ft


(F)/(F')=((v)/(v'))^2* ((r')/(r))


(126)/(F')=((25)/(45))^2* ((650)/(400))

On solving above equation,

F' = 251.2 lb

So, 251.2 lb of force would keep the same car going 45 mph from skidding on a curve of radius 650 ft. Hence, this is the required solution.

answered
User Elya
by
8.0k points
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