Problem 3:
A boy is fishing in a stationary (but unmoored) boat. Being ecologically conscious, he throws back the 2.0 kg fish he has caught. He gives the fish an initial horizontal velocity of 5.0 m/s relative to the water. The mass of the boy and the boat together is 50 kg. The fish is a largemouth bass, not a red herring.
a) What is the velocity vb of the boy and boat after the fish is thrown?
b) How much energy did the boy have to expend in throwing the fish?
Solution:
a) Use conservation of momentum (in the x-direction, where x=horizontal) as there are no external forces on the boat-fish-boy system in the x-direction. Initial momentum = 0, since everything starts off at rest.
pinitial = pfinal
0 = m1v1 + m2v2
thus
v2 = - [ m1v1]/m2
= - (2.0 kg)(5 m/s)/50 kg = -0.2 m/s
b) The energy expended (or work done) is the change in total kinetic
energy K. Initial kinetic energy
is zero, so
K = ½ m1v12
+ ½ m2v22
= ½ (2.0 kg) (5 m/s)2 + ½ (50 kg) (-0.2 m/s)2
= 26 J
(Note: Many people forgot the second term, i.e. neglected the fact that the boy's throw had to give energy to both the fish and the boat - this is also pointed out on page 194 of the textbook, question 7 at the end of section 7-3.)
Problem 4
Test 2
Physics 101 Home
page
Physics Department Home Page
College of William and Mary,
Dept. of Physics