University Physics Volume 1
18th Edition
ISBN: 9781938168277
Author: William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff Sanny
Publisher: OpenStax - Rice University
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Textbook Question
Chapter 13, Problem 34P
(a) What will be the kinetic energy of the asteroid in the previous problem just before it hits Earth? (b) Compare this energy to the output of the largest fission bomb, 2100 TJ. What impact would this have on Earth?
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An asteroid closely passes the Earth at a range of 17200mi and a relative speed of 7.8km/s.The diameter is estimated at 30mwith a specific gravity of 3. If this asteroid had impacted Earth, how much energy would have been released? Express this quantity in units of mega-tons (M ton) where a megaton is the energy released by one million metric tons of TNT explosive. A metric ton is 1000kgand the explosive energy density of TNT is 4184J/g.Hint: If the asteroid hits the Earth, its relative velocity becomes zero. Ignore any change in asteroid velocity due to gravitational acceleration or air resistance.
An asteroid closely passes the Earth at a range of 17200 mi and relative speed of 7.8 km/s. The diameter is estimated at 30 m with a specific gravity of 3. If this asteroid had impacted Earth, how much energy would have been released? Express this quantity in units of mega- tons (Mton) where a megaton is the energy released by one million metric tons of TNT explosive. A metric ton is 1000 kg and the explosive energy density of TNT is 4184 J/g. Hint: If the asteroid hits the Earth, its relative velocity becomes zero. Ignore any change in asteroid velocity due to gravitational acceleration or air resistance.
A 0.903 km diameter asteroid will make a crater about 10 km in diameter. Let the asteroid have a density of 3000 kg/m3 and impact the surface at 22 km/sec. Assuming a spherical asteroid, what is the kinetic energy (in joule) of the asteroid? Convert the answer to megatons of TNT, where 1 megaton is about 4 × 1015 joule. For comparison, the most energetic weapon in the human arsenal is about 100 megatons.
Chapter 13 Solutions
University Physics Volume 1
Ch. 13 - Check Your Understanding What happens to force and...Ch. 13 - Check Your Understanding How does your weight at...Ch. 13 - Check Your Understanding Why not use the simpler...Ch. 13 - Check Your Understanding If we send a probe out of...Ch. 13 - Check Your Understanding Assume you are in a...Ch. 13 - Check Your Understanding By what factor must the...Ch. 13 - Check Your Understanding There is another...Ch. 13 - Check Your Understanding Galaxies are not single...Ch. 13 - Check Your Understanding The nearly circular orbit...Ch. 13 - Check Your Understanding Earth exerts a tidal...
Ch. 13 - Check Your Understanding Consider the density...Ch. 13 - Action at a distance, such as is the case for...Ch. 13 - In the law of universal gravitation, Newton...Ch. 13 - Must engineers take Earth’s rotation into account...Ch. 13 - It was stated that a satellite with negative total...Ch. 13 - It was shown that the energy required to lift a...Ch. 13 - One student argues that a satellite in orbit is in...Ch. 13 - Many satellites are placed in geosynchronous...Ch. 13 - Are Kepler’s laws purely descriptive, or do they...Ch. 13 - In the diagram below for a satellite in an...Ch. 13 - As an object falls into a black hole, tidal forces...Ch. 13 - The principle of equivalence states that all...Ch. 13 - As a person approaches the Schwarzschild radius fo...Ch. 13 - Evaluate the magnitude of gravitational force...Ch. 13 - Estimate the gravitational force between two sumo...Ch. 13 - Astrology makes much of the position of the...Ch. 13 - A mountain 10.0 km from a person exerts a...Ch. 13 - The International Space Station has a mass of...Ch. 13 - Asteroid Toutatis passed near Earth in 2006 at...Ch. 13 - (a) What was the acceleration of Earth caused by...Ch. 13 - (a) Calculate Earth’s mass given the acceleratioln...Ch. 13 - (a) What is the acceleration due to gravity on the...Ch. 13 - (a) Calculate the acceleration due to gravity on...Ch. 13 - The mass of a particle is 15 kg. 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