Chapter 6: Q6-4Q (page 138)
Can the normal force on an object ever do work? Explain.
Short Answer
Yes, the normal force can do work on an object.
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Chapter 6: Q6-4Q (page 138)
Can the normal force on an object ever do work? Explain.
Yes, the normal force can do work on an object.
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Suppose a disk rotates at constant angular velocity. (a) Does a point on the rim have radial and or tangential acceleration? (b) If the disk’s angular velocity increases uniformly, does the point have radial and or tangential acceleration? (c) For which cases would the magnitude of either component of linear acceleration change?
Two balls are thrown off a building with the same speed, one straight up and one at a \({45^{\rm{o}}}\) angle. Which statement is true if air resistance can be ignored?
(I) A 16.0-kg child descends a slide 2.20 m high and, starting from rest, reaches the bottom with a speed of 1.25 m/s. How much thermal energy due to friction was generated in this process?
(II) A man doing push-ups pauses in the position shown in Fig. 9–65. His mass \({\bf{m = 68}}\;{\bf{kg}}\). Determine the normal force exerted by the floor (a) on each hand; (b) on each foot.

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