Ask Question
22 September, 10:22

When you jump straight up as high as you can, what is the order of magnitude of the maximum recoil speed that you give to the Earth? Model the Earth as a perfectly solid object. In your solution, state the physical quantities you take as data and the values you measure or estimate for them.

+3
Answers (1)
  1. 22 September, 13:55
    0
    5.66 * 10⁻²³ m/s

    Explanation:

    If i assume i can jump as high as h = 2 m, my initial velocity is gotten from v² = u² + 2gh. Since my final velocity v = 0, u = √2gh = √ (2 * 9.8 * 2) = √39.2 m/s = 6.26 m/s.

    Since initial momentum = final momentum,

    mv₁ + MV₁ = mv₂ + MV₂ where m, M, v₁, V₁, v₂ and V₂ are my mass, mass of earth, my initial velocity, earth's initial velocity, my final velocity and earth's final velocity respectively.

    My mass m = 54 kg, M = 5.972 * 10²⁴ kg, v₁ = 6.26 m/s, V₁ = 0, v₂ = 0 and V₂ = ?

    So mv₁ + M * 0 = m * 0 + MV₂

    mv₁ = MV₂

    V₂ = mv₁/M = 54kg * 6.26 m/s/5.972 * 10²⁴ kg = 338.093/5.972 * 10²⁴ = 56.61 * 10⁻²⁴ m/s = 5.661 * 10⁻²³ m/s ≅ 5.66 * 10⁻²³ m/s
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Get an answer to your question ✅ “When you jump straight up as high as you can, what is the order of magnitude of the maximum recoil speed that you give to the Earth? Model ...” in 📙 Physics if there is no answer or all answers are wrong, use a search bar and try to find the answer among similar questions.
Search for Other Answers