Exploration 4.4: Set the Force on a Hockey Puck
Please wait for the animation to completely load.
A 250-gram hockey puck is acted upon by a single force. It is free to slide on the
ice (position is given in meters and time is given in seconds) in any
direction. You can set the force vector by changing its magnitude (0 N < F
< 10 N) and direction. The force vector is shown in the animation as a red
arrow. You also can set the initial velocity components (-15 m/s < v
< 15 m/s). Restart.
- When the initial velocity is zero, in what direction does the ball
travel for a given force?
- When the initial velocity is not zero, in what direction does the
ball travel for a given force? Hint: The best way to do this is to
pick a nonzero v0x or v0y, not
both. Also turn on the ghosts.
- Try F = 5 N, θ = 270°, v0x
= 7 m/s, and v0y = 15 m/s. Does this motion look
familiar? Turn on the ghosts to help with the answer.
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