A free-fall parachutist is falling straight down - Edexcel - GCSE Physics - Question 5 - 2018 - Paper 1
Question 5
A free-fall parachutist is falling straight down.
This is a velocity/time graph of the first part of the jump, before the parachute is opened.
(a) Which of these p... show full transcript
Worked Solution & Example Answer:A free-fall parachutist is falling straight down - Edexcel - GCSE Physics - Question 5 - 2018 - Paper 1
Step 1
Which of these points on the graph shows the largest acceleration?
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Answer
To determine which point shows the largest acceleration, we need to examine the graph for the steepest gradient. The steepness of the slope on a velocity/time graph indicates acceleration. Looking at the points:
Point P: Low gradient.
Point Q: Moderate gradient.
Point R: Steeper gradient than Q.
Point S: Also steep, but slightly less than R.
Comparing these, Point R shows the largest acceleration due to its steep slope.
Step 2
Estimate the distance that the parachutist falls in the first 2.5 s.
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Answer
To estimate the distance fallen, we can use the area under the velocity/time graph from 0 to 2.5 s.
The area consists of a trapezoid (from 0 to 2.5 s).
Calculate the area of the trapezoid:
Height (velocity at 2.5s, approximately 10 m/s) + (velocity at 0s, which is 0 m/s) = 10 m/s
The base lengths are 2.5 s and 0 s.
Area = (1/2) * (Base1 + Base2) * Height = (1/2) * (2.5 + 0) * 10 = 12.5 m.
Thus, the distance the parachutist falls in the first 2.5 s is approximately 12.5 meters.