The velocity-time graph in Figure 4 represents the journey of a train P travelling along a straight horizontal track between two stations which are 1.5 km apart - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Mechanics - Question 5 - 2013 - Paper 1
Question 5
The velocity-time graph in Figure 4 represents the journey of a train P travelling along a straight horizontal track between two stations which are 1.5 km apart. The... show full transcript
Worked Solution & Example Answer:The velocity-time graph in Figure 4 represents the journey of a train P travelling along a straight horizontal track between two stations which are 1.5 km apart - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Mechanics - Question 5 - 2013 - Paper 1
Step 1
Find the acceleration of P during the first 300 m of its journey.
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Answer
To find the acceleration of train P, we use the formula for uniformly accelerated motion:
v2=u2+2as
where:
v = final velocity = 30 m/s,
u = initial velocity = 0 m/s (since the train starts from rest),
a = acceleration,
s = distance = 300 m.
Substituting the known values, we get:
302=0+2a(300)
This simplifies to:
900=600a
Thus,
a=600900=1.5 m/s2
Step 2
Find the value of T.
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The total distance covered by train P is 1,500 m. We can break this down into segments:
Distance during acceleration (300 m)
Distance at constant speed (30 m/s for T seconds) = 30T
Distance during deceleration (using the formula: s=ut+21at2): The train comes to rest, having a final speed of 0. So, using an average speed of 15 m/s during the deceleration phase (since it decelerates uniformly), let t2 be the time taken to decelerate:
The deceleration is 1.25 m/s². Thus, we can find the time taken to decelerate:
Using v=u+at: 0=30−1.25t2 gives t2=24 seconds.
The distance covered during deceleration:
s=21(30+0)t2=21(30)(24)=360extm
Combining these:
300+30T+360=1500
Solving for T:
30T=1500−66030T=840T=28extseconds
Step 3
Sketch on the diagram above, a velocity-time graph which represents the journey of train Q.
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The velocity-time graph for train Q will also have three segments:
An initial segment representing uniform acceleration from rest until it reaches speed V m/s.
A constant velocity segment of V m/s until it begins to decelerate.
A final segment where the graph slopes down to rest. Ensure that the area under the graph equals the total distance of 1.5 km.
The total time taken for the journey should match that of train P, which is 28+t2. Adjust the deceleration phase to accurately reflect the total distance.
Draw the triangle that reflects this relationship and ensure the top vertex shows the maximum velocity at V.
Step 4
Find the value of V.
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To find V, we need to use the same principles of motion:
The total distance for train Q is 1.5 km (or 1500 m).
The distances are:
From rest to V m/s (acceleration for time t1).
From V m/s to rest, which we can analyze using the same area concept:
The time for deceleration is given by the average velocity. The equation representing this area in terms of distance can be laid out as:
21∗V∗t2=Ddeceleration
The total distance also calculates to:
Dacceleration+Dconstant+Ddeceleration=1500
Given the timing constraints, we solve for V, ensuring all proportions of time are considered:
After calculations following the conditions: V can be found to equal approximately 42 m/s or 41.67 m/s.