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University Physics with Modern Physics

Hugh D. Young

Chapter 11

Equilibrium and Elasticity - all with Video Answers

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Chapter Questions

04:18

Problem 1

A 0.120-kg, 50.0-cm-long uniform bar has a small 0.055-kg mass glued to its left end and a small 0.110-kg mass glued to the other end. The two small masses can each be treated as point masses. You want to balance this system horizontally on a fulcrum placed just under its center of gravity. How far from the left end should the fulcrum be placed?

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
01:13

Problem 2

The center of gravity of a 5.00-kg irregular object is shown in $\textbf{Fig. E11.2.}$ You need to move the center of gravity 2.20 cm to the left by gluing on a 1.50-kg mass, which will then be considered as part of the object. Where should the center of gravity of this additional mass be located?
Figure e11.2
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
02:56

Problem 3

A uniform rod is 2.00 m long and has mass 1.80 kg. A 2.40-kg clamp is attached to the rod. How far should the center of gravity of the clamp be from the left-hand end of the rod in order for the center of gravity of the composite object to be 1.20 m from the left-hand end of the rod?

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
01:36

Problem 4

A uniform 300-N trapdoor in a floor is hinged at one side. Find the net upward force needed to begin to open it and the total force exerted on the door by the hinges (a) if the upward force is applied at the center and (b) if the upward force is applied at the center of the edge opposite the hinges.

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
05:08

Problem 5

A ladder carried by a fire truck is 20.0 m long. The ladder weighs 3400 N and its center of gravity is at its center. The ladder is pivoted at one end ($A$) about a pin ($\textbf{Fig. E11.5}$); ignore the friction torque at the pin. The ladder is raised into position by a force applied by a hydraulic piston at $C$. Point $C$ is 8.0 m from $A$, and the force $\overrightarrow{F}$ exerted by the piston makes an angle of 40$^\circ$ with the ladder. What magnitude must $\overrightarrow{F}$ have to just lift the ladder off the support bracket at $B$? Start with a free-body diagram of the ladder.
Figure e11.5
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
02:19

Problem 6

Two people are carrying a uniform wooden board that is 3.00 m long and weighs 160 N. If one person applies an upward force equal to 60 N at one end, at what point does the other person lift? Begin with a free-body diagram of the board.

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
04:42

Problem 7

Two people carry a heavy electric motor by placing it on a light board 2.00 m long. One person lifts at one end with a force of 400 N, and the other lifts the opposite end with a force of 600 N. (a) What is the weight of the motor, and where along the board is its center of gravity located? (b) Suppose the board is not light but weighs 200 N, with its center of gravity at its center, and the two people each exert the same forces as before. What is the weight of the motor in this case, and where is its center of gravity located?

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
02:53

Problem 8

A 60.0-cm, uniform, 50.0-N shelf is supported horizontally by two vertical wires attached to the sloping ceiling ($\textbf{Fig. E11.8}$). A very small 25.0-N tool is placed on the shelf midway between the points where the wires are attached to it. Find the tension in each wire. Begin by making a free-body diagram of the shelf.
Figure e11.8
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
03:32

Problem 9

A 350-N, uniform, 1.50-m bar is suspended horizontally by two vertical cables at each end. Cable $A$ can support a maximum tension of 500.0 N without breaking, and cable $B$ can support up to 400.0 N. You want to place a small weight on this bar. (a) What is the heaviest weight you can put on without breaking either cable, and (b) where should you put this weight?

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
03:26

Problem 10

A uniform ladder 5.0 m long rests against a frictionless, vertical wall with its lower end 3.0 m from the wall. The ladder weighs 160 N. The coefficient of static friction between the foot of the ladder and the ground is 0.40. A man weighing 740 N climbs slowly up the ladder. Start by drawing a free-body diagram of the ladder. (a) What is the maximum friction force that the ground can exert on the ladder at its lower end? (b) What is the actual friction force when the man has climbed 1.0 m along the ladder? (c) How far along the ladder can the man climb before the ladder starts to slip?

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
05:17

Problem 11

A diving board 3.00 m long is supported at a point 1.00 m from the end, and a diver weighing 500 N stands at the free end ($\textbf{Fig. E11.11}$). The diving board is of uniform cross section and weighs 280 N. Find (a) the force at the support point and (b) the force at the left-hand end.
Figure e11.11
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
05:45

Problem 12

A uniform aluminum beam 9.00 m long, weighing 300 N, rests symmetrically on two supports 5.00 m apart ($\textbf{Fig. E11.12}$). A boy weighing 600 N starts at point $A$ and walks toward the right.
(a) In the same diagram construct two graphs showing the upward forces $F_A$ and $F_B$ exerted on the beam at points $A$ and $B$, as functions of the coordinate $x$ of the boy. Let 1 cm $=$ 100 N vertically, and 1 cm $=$ 1.00 m horizontally. (b) From your diagram, how far beyond point $B$ can the boy walk before the beam tips? (c) How far from the right end of the beam should support $B$ be placed so that the boy can walk just to the end of the beam without causing it to tip?
Figure e11.12
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
15:19

Problem 13

Find the tension $T$ in each cable and the magnitude and direction of the force exerted on the strut by the pivot in each of the arrangements in $\textbf{Fig. E11.13.}$ In each case let w be the weight of the suspended crate full of priceless art objects. The strut is uniform and also has weight $w$. Start each case with a free-body diagram of the strut.
Figure e11.13
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Guilherme Barros
Guilherme Barros
Numerade Educator
03:15

Problem 14

The horizontal beam in $\textbf{Fig. E11.14}$ weighs 190 N, and its center of gravity is at its center. Find (a) the tension in the cable and (b) the horizontal and vertical components of the force exerted on the beam at the wall.
Figure e11.14
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
06:54

Problem 15

The boom shown in $\textbf{Fig. E11.15 }$weighs 2600 N and is attached to a frictionless pivot at its lower end. It is not uniform; the distance of its center of gravity from the pivot is 35% of its length. Find (a) the tension in the guy wire and (b) the horizontal and vertical components of the force exerted on the boom at its lower end. Start with a free-body diagram of the boom.
Figure e11.15
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
02:47

Problem 16

Suppose that you can lift no more than 650 N (around 150 lb) unaided. (a) How much can you lift using a 1.4-m-long wheelbarrow that weighs 80.0 N and whose center of gravity is 0.50 m from the center of the wheel ($\textbf{Fig. E11.16}$)? The center of gravity of the load carried in the wheelbarrow is also 0.50 m from the center of the wheel. (b) Where does the force come from to enable you to lift more than 650 N using the wheelbarrow?
Figure e11.16
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
09:34

Problem 17

A 9.00-m-long uniform beam is hinged to a vertical wall and held horizontally by a 5.00-m-long cable attached to the wall 4.00 m above the hinge ($\textbf{Fig. E11.17}$). The metal of this cable has a test strength of 1.00 kN, which means that it will break if the tension in it exceeds that amount. (a) Draw a free-body diagram of the beam. (b) What is the heaviest beam that the cable can support in this configuration? (c) Find the horizontal and vertical components of the force the hinge exerts on the beam. Is the vertical component upward or downward?
Figure E11.17
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
08:09

Problem 18

A 15,000-N crane pivots around a friction-free axle at its base and is supported by a cable making a 25$^\circ$ angle with the crane ($\textbf{Fig. E11.18)}$. The crane is 16 m long and is not uniform, its center of gravity being 7.0 m from the axle as measured along the crane. The cable is attached 3.0 m from the upper end of the crane. When the crane is raised to 55$^\circ$ above the horizontal holding an 11,000-N pallet of bricks by a 2.2-m, very light cord, find (a) the tension in the cable and (b) the horizontal and vertical components of the force that the axle exerts on the crane. Start with a free-body diagram of the crane.
Figure E11.18
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Jilin Wang
Jilin Wang
Boston University
07:46

Problem 19

A 3.00-m-long, 190-N, uniform rod at the zoo is held in a horizontal position by two ropes at its ends ($\textbf{Fig. E11.19}$). The left rope makes an angle of 150$^\circ$ with the rod, and the right rope makes an angle $\theta$ with the horizontal. A 90-N howler monkey ($Alouattase$ $niculus$) hangs motionless 0.50 m from the right end of the rod as he carefully studies you. Calculate the tensions in the two ropes and the angle $\theta$. First make a free-body diagram of the rod.
Figure E11.19
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Vishal Gupta
Vishal Gupta
Numerade Educator
08:38

Problem 20

A nonuniform beam 4.50 m long and weighing 1.40 kN makes an angle of 25.0$^\circ$ below the horizontal. It is held in position by a frictionless pivot at its upper right end and by a cable 3.00 m farther down the beam and perpendicular to it ($\textbf{Fig. E11.20}$). The center of gravity of the beam is 2.00 m down the beam from the pivot. Lighting equipment exerts a 5.00-kN downward force on the lower left end of the beam. Find the tension $T$ in the cable and the horizontal and vertical components of the force exerted on the beam by the pivot. Start by sketching a free-body diagram of the beam.
Figure E11.20
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Guilherme Barros
Guilherme Barros
Numerade Educator
08:23

Problem 21

Two forces equal in magnitude and opposite in direction, acting on an object at two different points, form what is called a $couple$. Two antiparallel forces with equal magnitudes $F_1 = F_2 =$ 8.00 N are applied to a rod as shown in $\textbf{Fig. E11.21.}$ (a) What should the distance l between the forces be if they are to provide a net torque of 6.40 N $\cdot$m about the left end of the rod? (b) Is the sense of this torque clockwise or counterclockwise? (c) Repeat parts (a) and (b) for a pivot at the point on the rod where $\overrightarrow{F_2}$ is applied.
Figure E11.21
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
02:32

Problem 22

You are doing exercises on a Nautilus machine in a gym to strengthen your deltoid (shoulder) muscles. Your arms are raised vertically and can pivot around the shoulder joint, and you grasp the cable of the machine in your hand 64.0 cm from your shoulder joint. The deltoid muscle is attached to the humerus 15.0 cm from the shoulder joint and makes a 12.0$^\circ$ angle with that bone ($\textbf{Fig. E11.22}$). If you have set the tension in the cable of the machine to 36.0 N on each arm, what is the tension in each deltoid muscle if you simply hold your outstretched arms in place? ($Hint:$ Start by making a clear free-body diagram of your arm.)
Figure E11.22
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
04:01

Problem 23

A student bends her head at 40.0$^\circ$ from the vertical while intently reading her physics book, pivoting the head around the upper vertebra (point $P$ in $\textbf{Fig. E11.23}$). Her head has a mass of 4.50 kg (which is typical), and its center of mass is 11.0 cm from the pivot point $P$. Her neck muscles are 1.50 cm from point $P$, as measured $perpendicular$ to these muscles. The neck itself and the vertebrae are held vertical. (a) Draw a free-body diagram of the student's head. (b) Find the tension in her neck muscles.
Figure E11.23
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
01:56

Problem 24

A relaxed biceps muscle requires a force of 25.0 N for an elongation of 3.0 cm; the same muscle under maximum tension requires a force of 500 N for the same elongation. Find Young's modulus for the muscle tissue under each of these conditions if the muscle is assumed to be a
uniform cylinder with length 0.200 m and cross-sectional area 50.0 cm$^2$.

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
05:04

Problem 25

A circular steel wire 2.00 m long must stretch no more than 0.25 cm when a tensile force of 700 N is applied to each end of the wire. What minimum diameter is required for the wire?

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
04:02

Problem 26

Two circular rods, one steel and the other copper, are joined end to end. Each rod is 0.750 m long and 1.50 cm in diameter. The combination is subjected to a tensile force with magnitude 4000 N. For each rod, what are (a) the strain and (b) the elongation?

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
04:00

Problem 27

A metal rod that is 4.00 m long and 0.50 cm$^2$ in crosssectional area is found to stretch 0.20 cm under a tension of 5000 N. What is Young's modulus for this metal?

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
View

Problem 28

A nylon rope used by mountaineers elongates 1.10 m under the weight of a 65.0-kg climber. If the rope is 45.0 m in length and 7.0 mm in diameter, what is Young's modulus for nylon?

Ankur S
Ankur S
Numerade Educator
06:29

Problem 29

In constructing a large mobile, an artist hangs an aluminum sphere of mass 6.0 kg from a vertical steel wire 0.50 m long and 2.5 $\times$ 10$^{-3}$ cm$^2$ in cross-sectional area. On the bottom of the sphere he attaches a similar steel wire, from which he hangs a brass cube of mass 10.0 kg. For each wire, compute (a) the tensile strain and (b) the elongation.

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
02:08

Problem 30

A vertical, solid steel post 25 cm in diameter and 2.50 m long is required to support a load of 8000 kg. You can ignore the weight of the post. What are (a) the stress in the post; (b) the strain in the post; and (c) the change in the post's length when the load is applied?

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
05:36

Problem 31

The bulk modulus for bone is 15 GPa. (a) If a diver-in-training is put into a pressurized suit, by how much would the pressure have to be raised (in atmospheres) above atmospheric pressure to compress her bones by 0.10% of their original volume? (b) Given that the pressure in the ocean increases by 1.0 $\times$ 10$^4$ Pa for every meter of depth below the surface, how deep would this diver have to go for her bones to compress by 0.10%? Does it seem that bone compression is a problem she needs to be concerned with when diving?

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
02:15

Problem 32

A solid gold bar is pulled up from the hold of the sunken RMS $Titanic$. (a) What happens to its volume as it goes from the pressure at the ship to the lower pressure at the ocean's surface? (b) The pressure difference is proportional to the depth. How many times greater would the volume change have been had the ship been twice as deep? (c) The bulk modulus of lead is one-fourth that of gold. Find the ratio of the volume change of a solid lead bar to that of a gold bar of equal volume for the same pressure change.

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
03:47

Problem 33

A specimen of oil having an initial volume of 600 cm$^3$ is subjected to a pressure increase of 3.6 $\times$ 10$^6$ Pa, and the volume is found to decrease by 0.45 cm$^3$. What is the bulk modulus of the material? The compressibility?

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
01:49

Problem 34

In the Challenger Deep of the Marianas Trench, the depth of seawater is 10.9 km and the pressure is 1.16 $\times$ 10$^8$ Pa (about 1.15 $\times$ 10$^3$ atm). (a) If a cubic meter of water is taken from the surface to this depth, what is the change in its volume? (Normal atmospheric pressure is about 1.0 $\times$ 10$^5$ Pa. Assume that $k$ for seawater is the same as the freshwater value given in Table 11.2.) (b) What is the density of seawater at this depth? (At the surface, seawater has a density of 1.03 $\times$ 10$^3$ kg/m$^3$.)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
03:43

Problem 35

A copper cube measures 6.00 cm on each side. The bottom face is held in place by very strong glue to a flat horizontal surface, while a horizontal force $F$ is applied to the upper face parallel to one of the edges. (Consult Table 11.1.) (a) Show that the glue exerts a force $F$ on the bottom face that is equal in magnitude but opposite to the force on the top face. (b) How large must $F$ be to cause the cube to deform by 0.250 mm? (c) If the same experiment were performed on a lead cube of the same size as
the copper one, by what distance would it deform for the same force as in part (b)?

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
01:36

Problem 36

A square steel plate is 10.0 cm on a side and 0.500 cm thick. (a) Find the shear strain that results if a force of magnitude 9.0 $\times$ 10$^5$ N is applied to each of the four sides, parallel to the side. (b) Find the displacement $x$ in centimeters.

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
View

Problem 37

In lab tests on a 9.25-cm cube of a certain material, a force of 1375 N directed at 8.50$^\circ$ to the cube ($\textbf{Fig. E11.37}$) causes the cube to deform through an angle of 1.24$^\circ$. What is the shear modulus of the material?
Figure E11.37
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Susan Hallstrom
Susan Hallstrom
Numerade Educator
01:07

Problem 38

A brass wire is to withstand a tensile force of 350 N without breaking. What minimum diameter must the wire have?

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
02:16

Problem 39

In a materials testing laboratory, a metal wire made from a new alloy is found to break when a tensile force of 90.8 N is applied perpendicular to each end. If the diameter of the wire is 1.84 mm, what is the breaking stress of the alloy?

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
03:00

Problem 40

A 4.0-m-long steel wire has a cross-sectional area of 0.050 cm$^2$. Its proportional limit has a value of 0.0016 times its Young's modulus (see Table 11.1). Its breaking stress has a value of 0.0065 times its Young's modulus. The wire is fastened at its upper end and hangs vertically. (a) How great a weight can be hung from the wire without exceeding the proportional limit? (b) How much will the wire stretch under this load? (c) What is the maximum weight that the wire can support?

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
03:56

Problem 41

A steel cable with cross-sectional area 3.00 cm$^2$ has an elastic limit of 2.40 $\times$ 10$^8$ Pa. Find the maximum upward acceleration that can be given a 1200-kg elevator supported by the cable if the stress is not to exceed one-third of the elastic limit.

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
01:51

Problem 42

A door 1.00 m wide and 2.00 m high weighs 330 N and is supported by two hinges, one 0.50 m from the top and the other 0.50 m from the bottom. Each hinge supports half the total weight of the door. Assuming that the door's center of gravity is at its center, find the horizontal components of force exerted on the door by each hinge.

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
01:14

Problem 43

A box of negligible mass rests at the left end of a 2.00-m, 25.0-kg plank ($\textbf{Fig. P11.43}$). The width of the box is 75.0 cm, and sand is to be distributed uniformly throughout it. The center of gravity of the nonuniform plank is 50.0 cm from the right end. What mass of sand should be put into the box so that the plank balances horizontally on a fulcrum placed just below its midpoint?
Figure E11.43
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Nicholas Mogoi
Nicholas Mogoi
Numerade Educator
02:49

Problem 44

Sir Lancelot rides slowly out of the castle at Camelot and onto the 12.0-m-long drawbridge that passes over the moat ($\textbf{Fig. P11.44}$). Unbeknownst to him, his enemies have partially severed the vertical cable holding up the front end of the bridge so that it will break under a tension of 5.80 $\times$ 10$^3$ N. The bridge has mass 200 kg and its center of gravity is at its center. Lancelot, his lance, his armor, and his horse together have a combined mass of 600 kg. Will the cable break before Lancelot reaches the end of the drawbridge? If so, how far from the castle end of the bridge will the center of gravity of the horse plus rider be when the cable breaks?
Figure E11.44
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
02:30

Problem 45

Mountaineers often use a rope to lower themselves down the face of a cliff (this is called $rappelling$). They do this with their body nearly horizontal and their feet pushing against the cliff ($\textbf{Fig. P11.45}$). Suppose that an 82.0-kg climber, who is 1.90 m tall and has a center of gravity 1.1 m from his feet, rappels down a vertical cliff with his body raised 35.0$^\circ$ above the horizontal. He holds the rope 1.40 m from his feet, and it makes a 25.0$^\circ$ angle with the cliff face. (a) What tension does his rope need to support? (b) Find the horizontal and vertical components of the force that the cliff face exerts on the climber's feet. (c) What minimum coefficient of static friction is needed to prevent the climber's feet from slipping on the cliff face if he has one foot at a time against the cliff?
Figure E11.45
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Nicholas Mogoi
Nicholas Mogoi
Numerade Educator
04:33

Problem 46

A uniform, 8.0-m, 1150-kg beam is hinged to a wall and supported by a thin cable attached 2.0 m from the free end of the beam ($\textbf{Fig. P11.46}$). The beam is supported at an angle of 30.0$^\circ$ above the horizontal. (a) Draw a free-body diagram of the beam. (b) Find the tension in the cable. (c) How hard does the beam push inward on the wall?
Figure E11.46
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
04:41

Problem 47

A uniform, 255-N rod that is 2.00 m long carries a 225-N weight at its right end and an unknown weight $W$ toward the left end ($\textbf{Fig. P11.47}$). When $W$ is placed 50.0 cm from the left end of the rod, the system just balances horizontally when the fulcrum is located 75.0 cm from the right end. (a) Find $W$. (b) If $W$ is now moved 25.0 cm to the right, how far and in what direction must the fulcrum be moved to restore balance?
Figure E11.47
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
01:13

Problem 48

A claw hammer is used to pull a nail out of a board ($\textbf{Fig. P11.48}$). The nail is at an angle of 60$^\circ$ to the board, and a force $\overrightarrow{F_1}$ of magnitude 400 N applied to the nail is required to pull it from the board. The hammer head contacts the board at point $A$, which is 0.080 m from where the nail enters the board. A horizontal force $\overrightarrow{F_2}$ is applied to the hammer handle at a distance of 0.300 m above the board. What magnitude of force $\overrightarrow{F_2}$ is required to apply the required 400-N force $(F_1)$ to the nail? (Ignore the weight of the hammer.)
Figure E11.48
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
07:10

Problem 49

You open a restaurant and hope to entice customers by hanging out a sign ($\textbf{Fig. P11.49}$). The uniform horizontal beam supporting the sign is 1.50 m long, has a mass of 16.0 kg, and is hinged to the wall. The sign itself is uniform with a mass of 28.0 kg and overall length of 1.20 m. The two wires supporting the sign are each 32.0 cm long, are 90.0 cm apart, and are equally spaced from the middle of the sign. The cable supporting the beam is 2.00 m long. (a) What minimum tension must your cable be able to support without having your sign come crashing down? (b) What minimum vertical force must the hinge be able to support without pulling out of the wall?
Figure E11.49
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
01:34

Problem 50

End A of the bar AB in $\textbf{Fig. P11.50}$ rests on a frictionless horizontal surface, and end $B$ is hinged. A horizontal force $\overrightarrow{F}$ of magnitude 220 N is exerted on end $A$. Ignore the weight of the bar. What are the horizontal and vertical components of the force exerted by the bar on the hinge at $B$?
Figure E11.50
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
03:42

Problem 51

A therapist tells a 74-kg patient with a broken leg that he must have his leg in a cast suspended horizontally. For minimum discomfort, the leg should be supported by a vertical strap attached at the center of mass of the leg$-$cast system ($\textbf{Fig. P11.51}$). To comply with these instructions, the patient consults a table of typical mass distributions and finds that both upper legs (thighs) together typically account for 21.5% of body weight and the center of mass of each thigh is 18.0 cm from the hip joint. The patient also reads that the two lower legs (including the feet) are 14.0% of body weight, with a center of mass 69.0 cm from the hip joint. The cast has a mass of 5.50 kg, and its center of mass is 78.0 cm from the hip joint. How far from the hip joint should the supporting strap be attached to the cast?
Figure E11.51
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
03:03

Problem 52

A loaded cement mixer drives onto an old drawbridge, where it stalls with its center of gravity three-quarters of the way across the span. The truck driver radios for help, sets the handbrake, and waits. Meanwhile, a boat approaches, so the drawbridge is raised by means of a cable attached to the end opposite the hinge ($\textbf{Fig. P11.52}$). The drawbridge
is 40.0 m long and has a mass of 18,000 kg; its center of gravity is at its midpoint. The cement mixer, with driver, has mass 30,000 kg. When the drawbridge has been raised to an angle of 30$^\circ$ above the horizontal, the cable makes an angle of 70$^\circ$ with the surface of the bridge. (a) What is the tension $T$ in the cable when the drawbridge is held in this position? (b) What are the horizontal and vertical components of the force the hinge exerts on the span?
Figure E11.52
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
06:03

Problem 53

In a simplified version of the musculature action in leg raises, the abdominal muscles pull on the femur (thigh bone) to raise the leg by pivoting it about one end ($\textbf{Fig. P11.53}$). When you are lying horizontally, these muscles make an angle of approximately 5$^\circ$ with the femur, and if you raise your legs, the muscles remain approximately horizontal, so the angle $\theta$ increases. Assume for simplicity that these muscles attach to the femur in only one place, 10 cm from the hip joint (although, in reality, the situation is more complicated). For a certain 80-kg person having a leg 90 cm long, the mass of the leg is 15 kg and its center of mass is 44 cm from his hip joint as measured along the leg. If the person raises his leg to 60$^\circ$ above the horizontal, the angle between the abdominal muscles and his femur would also be about 60$^\circ$.
Figure E11.53
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)
(a) With his leg raised to 60$^\circ$, find the tension in the abdominal muscle on each leg. Draw a free-body diagram. (b) When is the tension in this muscle greater: when the leg is raised to 60$^\circ$ or when the person just starts to raise it off the ground? Why? (Try this yourself.) (c) If the abdominal muscles attached to the femur were perfectly horizontal when a person was lying down, could the person raise his leg? Why or why not?

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
04:55

Problem 54

A 72.0-kg weightlifter doing arm raises holds a 7.50-kg weight. Her arm pivots around the elbow joint, starting 40.0$^\circ$ below the horizontal ($\textbf{Fig. P11.54}$).
Biometric measurements have shown that, together, the forearms and the hands account for 6.00% of a person's weight. Since the upper arm is held vertically, the biceps muscle always acts vertically and is attached to the bones of the forearm 5.50 cm from the elbow joint. The center of mass of this person's forearm$-$hand combination is 16.0 cm from the elbow joint, along the bones of the forearm, and she holds the weight 38.0 cm from her elbow joint. (a) Draw a free-body diagram of the forearm. (b) What force does the biceps muscle exert on the forearm? (c) Find the magnitude and direction of the force that the elbow joint exerts on the forearm. (d) As the weightlifter raises her arm toward a horizontal position, will the force in the biceps muscle increase, decrease, or stay the same? Why?
Figure E11.54
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
03:41

Problem 55

Women often suffer from back pains during pregnancy. Model a woman (not including her fetus) as a uniform cylinder of diameter 30 cm and mass 60 kg. Model the fetus as a 10-kg sphere that is 25 cm in diameter and centered about 5 cm $outside$ the front of the woman's body. (a) By how much does her pregnancy change the horizontal location of the woman's center of mass? (b) How does the change in part (a) affect the way the pregnant woman must stand and
walk? In other words, what must she do to her posture to make up for her shifted center of mass? (c) Can you explain why she might have backaches?

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
05:24

Problem 56

You are asked to design the decorative mobile shown in $\textbf{Fig. P11.56.}$ The strings and rods have negligible weight, and the rods are to hang horizontally. (a) Draw a free-body diagram for each rod. (b) Find the weights of the balls $A$, $B$, and $C$. Find the tensions in the strings $S_1$, $S_2$, and $S_3$. (c) What can you say about the horizontal location of the mobile's center of gravity? Explain.
Figure E11.56
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
02:19

Problem 57

A uniform, 7.5-m-long beam weighing 6490 N is hinged to a wall and supported by a thin cable attached 1.5 m from the free end of the beam. The cable runs between the beam and the wall and makes a 40$^\circ$ angle with the beam. What is the tension in the cable when the beam is at an angle of 30$^\circ$ above the horizontal?

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
06:33

Problem 58

A uniform drawbridge must be held at a 37$^\circ$ angle above the horizontal to allow ships to pass underneath. The drawbridge weighs 45,000 N and is 14.0 m long. A cable is connected 3.5 m from the hinge where the bridge pivots (measured along the bridge) and pulls horizontally on the bridge to hold it in place. (a) What is the tension in the cable? (b) Find the magnitude and direction of the force the hinge exerts on the bridge. (c) If the cable suddenly breaks, what is the magnitude of the angular acceleration of the drawbridge just after the cable breaks? (d) What is the angular speed of the drawbridge as it becomes horizontal?

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
05:42

Problem 59

As part of an exercise program, a 75-kg person does toe raises in which he raises his entire body weight on the ball of one foot ($\textbf{Fig. P11.59}$). The Achilles tendon pulls straight upward on the heel bone of his foot. This tendon is 25 cm long and has a cross-sectional area of 78 mm$^2$ and a Young's modulus of 1470 MPa. (a) Draw a free-body diagram of the person's foot (everything below the ankle joint). Ignore the weight of the foot. (b) What force does the Achilles tendon exert on the heel during this exercise? Express your answer in newtons and in multiples of his weight. (c) By how many millimeters does the exercise stretch his Achilles tendon?
Figure E11.59
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
02:44

Problem 60

(a) In $\textbf{Fig. P11.60}$ a 6.00-m-long, uniform beam is hanging from a point 1.00 m to the right of its center. The beam weighs 140 N and makes an angle of 30.0$^\circ$ with the vertical. At the right-hand end of the beam a 100.0-N weight is hung; an unknown weight $w$ hangs at the left end. If the system is in equilibrium, what is $w$? You can ignore the thickness of the beam. (b) If the beam makes, instead, an angle of 45.0$^\circ$ with the vertical, what is $w$?
Figure E11.60
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
06:23

Problem 61

A uniform, horizontal flagpole 5.00 m long with a weight of 200 N is hinged to a vertical wall at one end. A 600-N stuntwoman hangs from its other end. The flagpole is supported by a guy wire running from its outer end to a point on the wall directly above the pole. (a) If the tension in this wire is not to exceed 1000 N, what is the minimum height above the pole at which it may be fastened to the wall? (b) If the flagpole remains horizontal, by how many newtons would the tension be increased if the wire were fastened 0.50 m below this point?

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
05:25

Problem 62

A holiday decoration consists of two shiny glass spheres with masses 0.0240 kg and 0.0360 kg suspended from a uniform rod with mass 0.120 kg and length 1.00 m ($\textbf{Fig. P11.62}$). The rod is suspended from the ceiling by a vertical cord at each end, so that it is horizontal. Calculate the tension in each of the cords $A$ through $F$.
Figure E11.62
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
08:02

Problem 63

The yoga exercise "Downward-Facing Dog" requires stretching your hands straight out above your head and bending down to lean against the floor. This exercise is performed by a 750-N person as shown in $\textbf{Fig. P11.63.}$ When he bends his body at the hip to a 90$^\circ$ angle between his legs and trunk, his legs, trunk, head, and arms have the dimensions indicated. Furthermore, his legs and feet weigh a total of 277 N, and their center of mass is 41 cm from his hip, measured along his legs. The person's trunk, head, and arms weigh 473 N, and their center of gravity is 65 cm from his hip, measured along the upper body. (a) Find the normal force that the floor exerts on each foot and on each hand, assuming that the person does not favor either hand or either foot. (b) Find the friction force on each foot and on each hand, assuming that it is the same on both feet and on both hands (but not necessarily the same on the feet as on the hands).
Figure E11.63
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
03:56

Problem 64

A uniform metal bar that is 8.00 m long and has mass 30.0 kg is attached at one end to the side of a building by a frictionless hinge. The bar is held at an angle of 64.0$^\circ$ above the horizontal by a thin, light cable that runs from the end of the bar opposite the hinge to a point on the wall that is above the hinge. The cable makes an angle of 37.0$^\circ$ with the bar. Your mass is 65.0 kg. You grab the bar near the hinge and hang beneath it, with your hands close together and your feet off the ground. To impress your friends, you intend to shift your hands slowly toward the top end of the bar. (a) If the cable breaks when its tension exceeds 455 N, how far from the upper end of the bar are you when the cable breaks? (b) Just before the cable breaks, what are the magnitude and direction of the resultant force that the hinge exerts on the bar?

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
03:25

Problem 65

A worker wants to turn over a uniform, 1250-N, rectangular crate by pulling at 53.0$^\circ$ on one of its vertical sides ($\textbf{Fig. P11.65}$). The floor is rough enough to prevent the crate from slipping.
(a) What pull is needed to just start the crate to tip? (b) How hard does the floor push upward on the crate? (c) Find the friction force on the crate. (d) What is the minimum coefficient of static friction needed to prevent the crate from slipping on the floor?
Figure E11.65
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Supratim Pal
Supratim Pal
Numerade Educator
05:19

Problem 66

One end of a uniform meter stick is placed against a vertical wall ($\textbf{Fig. P11.66}$). The other end is held by a lightweight cord that makes an angle $\theta$ with the stick. The coefficient of static friction between the end of the meter stick and the wall is 0.40. (a) What is the maximum value the angle $\theta$ can have if the stick is to remain in equilibrium? (b) Let the angle $\theta$ be 15$^\circ$. A block of the same weight as the meter stick is suspended from the stick, as shown, at a distance $x$ from the wall. What is the minimum value of $x$ for which the stick will remain in equilibrium? (c) When $\theta = 15^\circ$, how large must the coefficient of static friction be so that the block can be attached 10 cm from the left end of the stick without causing it to slip?
Figure E11.66
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
03:47

Problem 67

Two friends are carrying a 200-kg crate up a flight of stairs. The crate is 1.25 m long and 0.500 m high, and its center of gravity is at its center. The stairs make a 45.0$^\circ$ angle with respect to the floor. The crate also is carried at a 45.0$^\circ$ angle, so that its bottom side is parallel to the slope of the stairs ($\textbf{Fig. P11.67}$). If the force each person applies is vertical, what is the magnitude of each of these forces? Is it better to be the person above or below on the stairs?
Figure E11.67
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
05:24

Problem 68

In the human arm, the forearm and hand pivot about the elbow joint. Consider a simplified model in which the biceps muscle is attached to the forearm 3.80 cm from the elbow joint. Assume that the person's hand and forearm together weigh 15.0 N and that their center of gravity is 15.0 cm from the elbow (not quite halfway to the hand). The forearm is held horizontally at a right angle to the upper arm, with the biceps muscle exerting its force perpendicular to the forearm. (a) Draw a free-body diagram for the forearm, and find the force exerted by the biceps when the hand is empty. (b) Now the person holds an 80.0-N weight in his hand, with the forearm still horizontal. Assume that the center of gravity of this weight is 33.0 cm from the elbow. Draw a free-body diagram for the forearm, and find the force now exerted by the biceps. Explain why the biceps muscle needs to be very strong. (c) Under the conditions of part (b), find the magnitude and direction of the force that the elbow joint exerts on the forearm. (d) While holding the 80.0-N weight, the person raises his forearm until it is at an angle of 53.0$^\circ$ above the horizontal. If the biceps muscle continues to exert its force perpendicular to the forearm, what is this force now? Has the force increased or decreased from its value in part (b)? Explain why this is so, and test your answer by doing this with your own arm.

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
07:00

Problem 69

Refer to the discussion of holding a dumbbell in Example 11.4 (Section 11.3). The maximum weight that can be held in this way is limited by the maximum allowable tendon tension $T$ (determined by the strength of the tendons) and by the distance $D$ from the elbow to where the tendon attaches to the forearm. (a) Let $T_{max}$ represent the maximum value of the tendon tension. Use the results of Example 11.4 to express wmax (the maximum weight that can be held) in terms of $T_{max}$, $L$, $D$, and $h$. Your expression should not include the angle $\theta$. (b) The tendons of different primates are attached to the forearm at different values of $D$. Calculate the derivative of $w_{max}$ with respect to $D$, and determine whether the derivative is positive or negative. (c) A chimpanzee tendon is attached to the forearm at a point farther from the elbow than for humans. Use this to explain why chimpanzees have stronger arms than humans. (The disadvantage is that chimpanzees have less flexible arms than do humans.)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
03:39

Problem 70

In a city park a nonuniform wooden beam 4.00 m long is suspended horizontally by a light steel cable at each end. The cable at the left-hand end makes an angle of 30.0$^\circ$ with the vertical and has tension 620 N. The cable at the right-hand end of the beam makes an angle of 50.0$^\circ$ with the vertical. As an employee of the Parks and Recreation Department, you are asked to find the weight of the beam and the location of its center of gravity.

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
07:13

Problem 71

You are a summer intern for an architectural firm. An 8.00-m-long uniform steel rod is to be attached to a wall by a frictionless hinge at one end. The rod is to be held at 22.0$^\circ$ below the horizontal by a light cable that is attached to the end of the rod opposite the hinge. The cable makes an angle of 30.0$^\circ$ with the rod and is attached to the wall at a point above the hinge. The cable will break if its tension exceeds 650 N. (a) For what mass of the rod will the cable break? (b) If the rod has a mass that is 10.0 kg less than the value calculated in part (a), what are the magnitude and direction of the force that the hinge exerts on the rod?

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
02:35

Problem 72

You are trying to raise a bicycle wheel of mass m and radius $R$ up over a curb of height $h$. To do this, you apply a horizontal force $\overrightarrow{F}$ ($\textbf{Fig. P11.72}$). What is the smallest magnitude of the force $\overrightarrow{F}$ that will succeed in raising the wheel onto the curb when the force is applied (a) at the center of the wheel and (b) at the top of the wheel? (c) In which case is less force required?
Figure E11.72
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
05:50

Problem 73

A gate 4.00 m wide and 2.00 m high weighs 700 N. Its center of gravity is at its center, and it is hinged at $A$ and $B$. To relieve the strain on the top hinge, a wire CD is connected as shown in $\textbf{Fig. P11.73.}$ The tension in CD is increased until the horizontal force at hinge $A$ is zero. What is (a) the tension in the wire CD; (b) the magnitude of the horizontal component of the force at hinge $B$; (c) the combined vertical force exerted by hinges $A$ and $B$?
Figure E11.73
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
04:02

Problem 74

If you put a uniform block at the edge of a table, the center of the block must be over the table for the block not to fall off. (a) If you stack two identical blocks at the table edge, the center of the top block must be over the bottom block, and the center of gravity of the two blocks together must be over the table. In terms of the length $L$ of each block, what is the maximum overhang possible ($\textbf{Fig. P11.74}$)? (b) Repeat part (a) for three identical blocks and for four identical blocks. (c) Is it possible to make a stack of blocks such that the uppermost block is not directly over the table at all? How many blocks would it take to do this? (Try.)
Figure E11.74
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
06:18

Problem 75

Two uniform, 75.0-g marbles 2.00 cm in diameter are stacked as shown in $\textbf{Fig. P11.75}$ in a container that is 3.00 cm wide. (a) Find the force that the container exerts on the marbles at the points of contact $A$, $B$, and $C$. (b) What force does each marble exert on the other?
Figure E11.75
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
03:16

Problem 76

Two identical, uniform beams weighing 260 N each are connected at one end by a frictionless hinge. A light horizontal crossbar attached at the midpoints of the beams maintains an angle of 53.0$^\circ$ between the beams. The beams are suspended from the ceiling by vertical wires such that they form a "V" ($\textbf{Fig. P11.76}$). (a) What force does the crossbar exert on each beam? (b) Is the crossbar under tension or compression? (c) What force (magnitude and direction) does the hinge at point $A$ exert on each beam?
Figure E11.76
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
09:00

Problem 77

An engineer is designing a conveyor system for loading hay bales into a wagon ($\textbf{Fig. P11.77}$). Each bale is 0.25 m wide, 0.50 m high, and 0.80 m long (the dimension perpendicular to the plane of the figure), with mass 30.0 kg. The center of gravity of each bale is at its geometrical center. The coefficient of static friction between a bale and the conveyor belt is 0.60, and the belt moves with constant speed. (a) The angle $\beta$ of the conveyor is slowly increased. At some critical angle a bale will tip (if it doesn't slip first), and at some different critical angle it will slip (if it doesn't tip first). Find the two critical angles and determine which happens at the smaller angle. (b) Would the outcome of part (a) be different if the coefficient of friction were 0.40?
Figure E11.77
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
03:28

Problem 78

A weight $W$ is supported by attaching it to a vertical uniform metal pole by a thin cord passing over a pulley having negligible mass and friction. The cord is attached to the pole 40.0 cm below the top and pulls horizontally on it ($\textbf{Fig. P11.78}$). The pole is pivoted about a hinge at its base, is 1.75 m tall, and weighs 55.0 N. A thin wire connects the top of the pole to a vertical wall. The nail that holds this wire to the wall will pull out if an $outward$ force greater than 22.0 N acts on it. (a) What is the greatest weight $W$ that can be supported this way without pulling out the nail? (b) What is the $magnitude$ of the force that the hinge exerts on the pole?
Figure E11.78
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
10:39

Problem 79

A garage door is mounted on an overhead rail ($\textbf{Fig. P11.79}$). The wheels at $A$ and $B$ have rusted so that they do not roll, but rather slide along the track. The coefficient of kinetic friction is 0.52. The distance between the wheels is 2.00 m, and each is 0.50 m from the vertical sides of the door. The door is uniform and weighs 950 N. It is pushed to the left at constant speed by a horizontal force $\overrightarrow{F}$. (a) If the distance $h$ is 1.60 m, what is the vertical component of the force exerted on each wheel by the track? (b) Find the maximum value $h$ can have without causing one wheel to leave the track.
Figure E11.79
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
03:31

Problem 80

Ancient pyramid builders are balancing a uniform rectangular slab of stone tipped at an angle $\theta$ above the horizontal using a rope ($\textbf{Fig. P11.80}$). The rope is held by five workers who share the force equally. (a) If $\theta =$ 20.0$^\circ$, what force does each worker exert on the rope? (b) As $\theta$ increases, does each worker have to exert more or less force than in part (a), assuming they do not change the angle of the rope? Why? (c) At what angle do the workers need to exert $no$ $force$ to balance the slab? What happens if $\theta$ exceeds
this value?
Figure E11.80
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
05:06

Problem 81

A 12.0-kg mass, fastened to the end of an aluminum wire with an unstretched length of 0.70 m, is whirled in a vertical circle with a constant angular speed of 120 rev/min. The cross-sectional area of the wire is 0.014 cm$^2$. Calculate the elongation of the wire when the mass is (a) at the lowest point of the
path and (b) at the highest point of its path.

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
03:44

Problem 82

A wire of length $l_0$ and cross-sectional area $A$ supports a hanging weight W. (a) Show that if the wire obeys Eq. (11.7), it behaves like a spring of force constant ${AY}/l_0$, where $Y$ is Young's modulus for the wire material. (b) What would the force constant be for a 75.0-cm length of 16-gauge (diameter $=$ 1.291 mm) copper wire? See Table 11.1. (c) What would $W$ have to be to stretch the wire in part (b) by 1.25 mm?

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
04:52

Problem 83

A 1.05-m-long rod of negligible weight is supported at its ends by wires $A$ and $B$ of equal length ($\textbf{Fig. P11.83}$). The cross-sectional area of $A$ is 2.00 mm$^2$ and that of $B$ is 4.00 mm$^2$. Young's modulus for wire $A$ is 1.80 $\times$ 10$^{11}$ Pa; that for $B$ is 1.20 $\times$ 10$^{11}$ Pa. At what point along the rod should a weight w be suspended to produce (a) equal stresses in $A$ and $B$ and (b) equal strains in $A$ and $B$?
Figure E11.83
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
03:14

Problem 84

An amusement park ride consists of airplane-shaped cars attached to steel rods ($\textbf{Fig. P11.84}$). Each rod has a length of 15.0 m and a cross-sectional area of 8.00 cm$^2$. (a) How much is each rod stretched when it is vertical and the ride is at rest? (Assume that each car plus two people seated in it has a total weight of 1900 N.) (b) When operating, the ride has a maximum angular speed of 12.0 rev/min. How much is the rod stretched then?
Figure E11.84
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
05:50

Problem 85

The compressive strength of our bones is important in everyday life. Young's modulus for bone is about 1.4 $\times$ 10$^{10}$ Pa. Bone can take only about a 1.0% change in its length before fracturing. (a) What is the maximum force that can be applied to a bone whose minimum cross-sectional area is 3.0 cm$^2$? (This is approximately the crosssectional area of a tibia, or shin bone, at its narrowest point.) (b) Estimate the maximum height from which a 70-kg man could
jump and not fracture his tibia. Take the time between when he first touches the floor and when he has stopped to be 0.030 s, and assume that the stress on his two legs is distributed equally.

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
07:24

Problem 86

You are to use a long, thin wire to build a pendulum in a science museum. The wire has an unstretched length of 22.0 m and a circular cross section of diameter 0.860 mm; it is made of an alloy that has a large breaking stress. One end of the wire will be attached to the ceiling, and a 9.50-kg metal sphere will be attached to the other end. As the pendulum swings back and forth, the wire's maximum angular displacement from the vertical will be 36.0$^\circ$. You must determine the maximum amount the wire will stretch during this motion. So, before you attach the metal sphere, you suspend a test mass (mass $m$) from the wire's lower end. You then measure the increase in length $\Delta l$ of the wire for several different test masses. Figure P11.86, a graph of $\Delta l$ versus $m$, shows the results and the straight line that gives the best fit to the data. The equation for this line is $\Delta l =$ (0.422 mm/kg)$m$. (a) Assume that $g =$ 9.80 m/s$^2$, and use Fig. P11.86 to calculate Young's modulus $Y$ for this wire. (b) You remove the test masses, attach the 9.50-kg sphere, and release the sphere from rest, with the wire displaced by 36.0$^\circ$. Calculate the amount the wire will stretch as it swings through the vertical. Ignore air resistance.
Figure E11.86
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
10:40

Problem 87

You need to measure the mass $M$ of a 4.00-m-long bar. The bar has a square cross section but has some holes drilled along its length, so you suspect that its center of gravity isn't in the middle of the bar. The bar is too long for you to weigh on your scale. So, first you balance the bar on a knife-edge pivot and determine that the bar's center of gravity is 1.88 m from its left-hand end. You then place the bar on the pivot so that the point of support is 1.50 m from the left-hand end of the bar. Next you
suspend a 2.00-kg mass (${m_1}$) from the bar at a point 0.200 m from the left-hand end. Finally, you suspend a mass ${m_2} =$ 1.00 kg from the bar at a distance $x$ from the left-hand end and adjust $x$ so that the bar is balanced. You repeat this step for other values of ${m_2}$ and record each corresponding value of $x$. The table gives your results. (a) Draw a free-body diagram for the bar when ${m_1}$ and ${m_2}$ are suspended from it. (b) Apply the static equilibrium equation $\Sigma\tau_z = 0$ with the axis at the location of the knife-edge pivot. Solve the equation for $x$ as a function of ${m_2}$. (c) Plot $x$ versus 1/m$_2$. Use the slope of the best-fit straight line and the equation you derived in part (b) to calculate that bar's mass $M$. Use $g =$ 9.80 m/s$^2$. (d) What is the $y$-intercept of the straight line that fits the data? Explain why it has this value.

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
16:26

Problem 88

You are a construction engineer working on the interior design of a retail store in a mall. A 2.00-m-long uniform bar of mass 8.50 kg is to be attached at one end to a wall, by means of a hinge that allows the bar to rotate freely with very little friction. The bar will be held in a horizontal position by a light cable from a point on the bar (a distance $x$ from the hinge) to a point on the wall above the hinge. The cable makes an angle $\theta$ with the bar. The architect has proposed four possible ways to connect the cable and asked you to assess them: (a) There is concern about the strength of the cable that will be required. Which set of $x$ and $\theta$ values in the table produces the smallest tension in the cable? The greatest? (b) There is concern about the breaking strength of the sheetrock wall where the hinge will be attached. Which set of $x$ and $\theta$ values produces the smallest horizontal component of the force the bar exerts on the hinge? The largest? (c) There is also concern about the required strength of the hinge and the strength of its attachment to the wall. Which set of $x$ and $\theta$ values produces the smallest magnitude of the vertical component of the force the bar exerts on the hinge? The largest? ($Hint:$ Does the direction of the vertical component of the force the hinge exerts on the bar depend on where along the bar the cable is attached?) (d) Is one of the alternatives given in the table preferable? Should any of the alternatives be avoided Discuss.

Veronica Pillar
Veronica Pillar
Numerade Educator
10:50

Problem 89

Two ladders, 4.00 m and 3.00 m long, are hinged at point A and tied together by a horizontal rope 0.90 m above the floor ($\textbf{Fig. P11.89}$). The ladders weigh 480 N and 360 N, respectively, and the center of gravity of each is at its center. Assume that the floor is freshly waxed and frictionless. (a) Find the upward force at the bottom of each ladder. (b) Find the tension in the rope. (c) Find the magnitude of the force one ladder exerts on the other at point A. (d) If an 800-N painter stands at point A, find the tension in the horizontal rope.
Figure E11.89
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
05:20

Problem 90

One end of a post weighing 400 N and with height $h$ rests on a rough horizontal surface with $\mu_s =$ 0.30. The upper end is held by a rope fastened to the surface and making an angle of 36.9$^\circ$ with the post ($\textbf{Fig. P11.90}$). A horizontal force $\overrightarrow{F}$ is exerted on the post as shown. (a) If the force $\overrightarrow{F}$ is applied at the midpoint of the post, what is the largest value it can have without causing the post to slip? (b) How large can the force be without causing the post to slip if its point of application is $\frac{6}{10}$ of the way from the ground to the top of the post? (c) Show that if the point of application of the force is too high, the post cannot be made to slip, no matter how great the force. Find the critical height for the point of application.
Figure E11.90
(CAN'T COPY THE FIGURE)

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
12:16

Problem 91

An angler hangs a 4.50-kg fish from a vertical steel wire 1.50 m long and 5.00 $\times$ 10$^{-3}$ cm$^2$ in cross-sectional area. The upper end of the wire is securely fastened to a support. (a) Calculate the amount the wire is stretched by the hanging fish. The angler now applies a varying force $\overrightarrow{F}$ at the lower end of the wire, pulling it very slowly downward by 0.500 mm from
its equilibrium position. For this downward motion, calculate (b) the work done by gravity; (c) the work done by the force $\overrightarrow{F}$, (d) the work done by the force the wire exerts on the fish; and
(e) the change in the elastic potential energy (the potential energy associated with the tensile stress in the wire). Compare the answers in parts (d) and (e). $\textbf{Torques and Tug-of-War.}$ In a study of the biomechanics of the tug-of-war, a 2.0-m-tall, 80.0-kg competitor in the middle of the line is considered to be a rigid body leaning back at an angle of 30.0$^\circ$ to the vertical. The competitor is pulling on a rope that is held horizontal a distance of 1.5 m from his feet (as measured along the line of the body). At the moment shown in the figure, the man is stationary and the tension in the rope in front of him is ${T_1} =$ 1160 N. Since there is friction between the rope and his hands, the tension in the rope behind him, ${T_2}$ is not equal to ${T_1}$. His center of mass is halfway between his feet and the top of his head. The coefficient of static friction between his feet and the ground is 0.65.

Jayashree Behera
Jayashree Behera
Numerade Educator
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Problem 92

What is tension ${T_2}$ in the rope behind him? (a) 590 N; (b) 650 N; (c) 860 N; (d) 1100 N.

Miguel Perez
Miguel Perez
Numerade Educator
02:37

Problem 93

If he leans slightly farther back (increasing the angle between his body and the vertical) but remains stationary in this new position, which of the following statements is true? Assume that the rope remains horizontal. (a) The difference between ${T_1}$ and ${T_2}$ will increase, balancing the increased torque about his feet that his weight produces when he leans farther back; (b) the difference between ${T_1}$ and ${T_2}$ will decrease, balancing the increased torque about his feet that his weight produces when he leans farther back; (c) neither ${T_1}$ nor ${T_2}$ will change, because no other forces are changing; (d) both ${T_1}$ and ${T_2}$ will change, but the difference between them will remain the same.

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator
01:34

Problem 94

His body is again leaning back at 30.0$^\circ$ to the vertical, but now the height at which the rope is held above$-$but still parallel to$-$the ground is varied. The tension in the rope in front of the competitor (${T_1}$) is measured as a function of the shortest distance between the rope and the ground (the holding height). Tension ${T_1}$ is found to decrease as the holding height increases. What could explain this observation? As the holding height increases, (a) the moment arm of the rope about his feet decreases due to the angle that his body makes with the vertical; (b) the moment arm of the weight about his feet decreases due to the angle that his body makes with the vertical; (c) a smaller tension in the rope is needed to produce a torque sufficient to balance the torque of the weight about his feet; (d) his center of mass moves down to compensate, so less tension in the rope is required to maintain equilibrium.

Averell Hause
Averell Hause
Carnegie Mellon University
02:53

Problem 95

His body is leaning back at 30.0$^\circ$ to the vertical, but the coefficient of static friction between his feet and the ground is suddenly reduced to 0.50. What will happen? (a) His entire body will accelerate forward; (b) his feet will slip forward; (c) his feet will slip backward; (d) his feet will not slip.

Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson
Numerade Educator