MedVision ad

Motion and differentiation question (1 Viewer)

ataratar

Member
Joined
Aug 4, 2012
Messages
78
Gender
Female
HSC
2014
Hey guys, this probably isn't very hard but I'm very confused! Any help would be much appreciated :)
A particle is moving in a straight line so that its displacement xcm over time t seconds is given by x=t(square root: 49-t2)
How far does the particle move altogether?
Sorry for the confusion about the square root sign, basically just the 49 - t2 is all under a square root multiplied by t on the outside!
Thankya :)
 

bokat

Active Member
Joined
Sep 12, 2006
Messages
214
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
The time has to be between 0 and 7, otherwise sqrt(49-t^2) will not be defined and time can not be negative.
At t=0 x=0 and t=7 x=0. And x is positive as both t and sqrt(49-t^2) is positive.
So if we sketch x versus t it will be from zero to a max and then back to zero.
To find that max differentiate x with respect to t which gives sqrt(49-t^2)-t^2/sqrt(49-t^2) and equate it to zero.
You will get t=7/sqrt(2) sub back in x to get x=49/2. This is the max value for x.
So the answer is 0<=x<=49/2.

Reza Bokat
www.cambridgecoaching.com.au
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top