A car starts from rest to go a distance 's' in a straight line. Its acceleration 't' seconds after the start is a(1 - t/b) until it has attained maximum velocity. ('a' and 'b' are constants, and it attains this maximum velocity within a distance less than 's')
If 'T' be the whole time for the distance, and T<sub>1</sub> be the corresponding time for the same car to go the distance at maximum velocity, prove that
b = 3(T - T<sub>1</sub>) and
a = 2s/3T<sub>1</sub>(T - T<sub>1</sub>)
So what i've done so far is this:
dv/dt = a(1 - t/b)
v = a(t - t<sup>2</sup>/2b)
dx/dt = a(t - t<sup>2</sup>/2b)
x = a(t<sup>2</sup>/2 - t<sup>3</sup>/6b)
V<sub>max</sub> when acceleration = 0, t = b
V<sub>max</sub> = ab/2
Not sure but does "T<sub>1</sub> be the corresponding time for the same car to go the distance at maximum velocity" mean:
T<sub>1</sub> = s/V<sub>max</sub>
T<sub>1</sub> = 2s/ab?
dno where to go from here...
If 'T' be the whole time for the distance, and T<sub>1</sub> be the corresponding time for the same car to go the distance at maximum velocity, prove that
b = 3(T - T<sub>1</sub>) and
a = 2s/3T<sub>1</sub>(T - T<sub>1</sub>)
So what i've done so far is this:
dv/dt = a(1 - t/b)
v = a(t - t<sup>2</sup>/2b)
dx/dt = a(t - t<sup>2</sup>/2b)
x = a(t<sup>2</sup>/2 - t<sup>3</sup>/6b)
V<sub>max</sub> when acceleration = 0, t = b
V<sub>max</sub> = ab/2
Not sure but does "T<sub>1</sub> be the corresponding time for the same car to go the distance at maximum velocity" mean:
T<sub>1</sub> = s/V<sub>max</sub>
T<sub>1</sub> = 2s/ab?
dno where to go from here...
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