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18 February, 04:10

Two billion people jump up in the air at the same time with an average velocity of 7.0 m/sec. If the mass of

an average person is 60 kilograms and the mass of Earth is 5.98 * 1024 kilograms:

a. What is the total momentum of the two billion people?

b. What is the effect of their action on Earth?

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Answers (1)
  1. 18 February, 05:15
    0
    Well, first of all, remember that the Earth is a sphere (ball-shaped).

    So chances are that some of the people will jump in exactly the opposite

    direction compared to some of the others, and they'll all cancel each other.

    But I understand what you're getting at. So let's assume that the Earth

    is a big cube, and all the jumpers stand on the same face of the cube and

    all jump in the same direction.

    Momentum = (mass) x (speed).

    The combined momentum of your flash mob is

    (2 billion) x (60kg) x (7 m/s) = 8.4 x 10¹¹ kg-m/s.

    In order for linear momentum to be conserved, the Earth must move

    in the opposite direction with the same momentum.

    Earth's momentum = (Earth's mass) x (Earth's speed)

    Divide each side by (Earth's mass):

    Earth's speed = (Earth's momentum) / (Earth's mass) =

    (8.4 x 10¹¹ kg-m/s) / (5.98 * 10²⁴ kg) =

    1.4 x 10⁻¹³ m/s.

    As the crowd jumps upward, transferring their combined momentum

    to the Earth, the Earth moves downward, at the speed of

    0.000 000 000 14 millimeter per second.
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