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A frightened child is restrained by her mother as the child slides down a frictionless playground slide. If the force on the child from the mother is100Nup the slide, the child’s kinetic energy increases by 30Jas she moves down the slide a distance of1.8m. (a) How much work is done on the child by the gravitational force during the1.8m descent? (b) If the child is not restrained by her mother, how much will the child’s kinetic energy increase as she comes down the slide that same distance of1.8m?

Short Answer

Expert verified
  1. Work done on the child by gravity during 1.8mdescent is 210J.
  2. If the child is not restrained by her mother, then increase in child’s kinetic energy as she comes down the slide that same distance is210J.

Step by step solution

01

Given information

It is given that,

  1. Force given by mother isFm=100N
  2. Increase in child's kinetic energy is∆KE=30J
  3. Distance of sliding isd=1.8m
02

Determining the concept

This problem deals with the work-energy theorem which states that the net work done by the forces applied on object is equal to the change in its kinetic energy. Using the work-energy theorem, find the work done by gravity. Also, find the increase in the kinetic energy using the concept of conservation of energy and total work done.

Formulae are as follow:

W=F.d

Where,

F is force, dis displacement and Wis the work done.

Total work done is

Wtotal=Wg+Wm

03

(a) Determining the work done on the child by gravity during 1.8 m descent

Work done by the force of mother is,

Wm=Fm×dWm=100×1.8Wm=-180J

It is negative because displacement is opposite to force.

Wgis work done by gravity.

Wtotal=Wg+Wm

By work-energy theorem, the total work is the change in kinetic energy,

Wtotal=Wg+Wm=∆KE∆KE=Wg+Wm30=Wg-180Wg=210J

Hence, the work done on the child by gravity during 1.8m descent is210J

04

(b) determining the increase in kinetic energy

If her mother had not restrained the child, then only gravitational force is applied on the child, so the work done is only due to gravity and that is,

Wg=210J.

So, the increase in kinetic energy is equal to ∆KE=210J

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