Author Topic: Can someone please help me?  (Read 1973 times)

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Offline hudagph

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Can someone please help me?
« on: February 09, 2015, 03:53:35 AM »
An announcer at an NFL playoff game made a comment that the defensive line was so small that they had no chance of stopping the quarterback on a run. The average quarterback has a mass of 100 kg. The smaller size defensive linemen have a mass of 113 kg.

a. If on the play in question, the quarterback was able to run 12.5 meters in 0.6 seconds, with an average velocity of 7.4 m/s what would his applied force be?
b. What would the top speed of the defensive lineman have to be less than, in order for him NOT to have enough force to stop the quarterback?


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Offline Fldermaus

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Re: Can someone please help me?
« Reply #1 on: February 09, 2015, 08:12:52 AM »
Jesus Christ, if your quarterback can accelerate to ~45 mph in about half a second, then nobody will stop him.

Offline EMAWican

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Re: Can someone please help me?
« Reply #2 on: February 09, 2015, 08:18:10 AM »
I'm going to need to do some unit conversations from metric to American and get back with you on this.

Offline 8manpick

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Re: Can someone please help me?
« Reply #3 on: February 09, 2015, 08:47:17 AM »


An announcer at an NFL playoff game made a comment that the defensive line was so small that they had no chance of stopping the quarterback on a run. The average quarterback has a mass of 100 kg. The smaller size defensive linemen have a mass of 113 kg.

a. If on the play in question, the quarterback was able to run 12.5 meters in 0.6 seconds, with an average velocity of 7.4 m/s what would his applied force be?
b. What would the top speed of the defensive lineman have to be less than, in order for him NOT to have enough force to stop the quarterback?

12.5 meters in 0.6 seconds, average speed of 7.4m/s? Oooookkayy Bill Nye :jerk:
:adios:

Offline Fldermaus

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Re: Can someone please help me?
« Reply #4 on: February 09, 2015, 08:53:30 AM »
I'm going to need to do some unit conversations from metric to American and get back with you on this.

rounding:  running ~12 meters in half a second = 24 meters in a second.  A meter is a little longer than a yard, so that is roughly 25 yards a second. 

That gives a 40-time of less than 2 seconds, or a 100 yard dash in about 4 seconds. 

Offline The Tonya Harding of Twitter Users Creep

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Re: Can someone please help me?
« Reply #5 on: February 09, 2015, 09:25:29 AM »


An announcer at an NFL playoff game made a comment that the defensive line was so small that they had no chance of stopping the quarterback on a run. The average quarterback has a mass of 100 kg. The smaller size defensive linemen have a mass of 113 kg.

a. If on the play in question, the quarterback was able to run 12.5 meters in 0.6 seconds, with an average velocity of 7.4 m/s what would his applied force be?
b. What would the top speed of the defensive lineman have to be less than, in order for him NOT to have enough force to stop the quarterback?

12.5 meters in 0.6 seconds, average speed of 7.4m/s? Oooookkayy Bill Nye :jerk:

he said velocity. did you take a physics class in college?
I think what my friend Mitch is trying to say is that true love is blind.

Offline 8manpick

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Re: Can someone please help me?
« Reply #6 on: February 09, 2015, 09:33:55 AM »




An announcer at an NFL playoff game made a comment that the defensive line was so small that they had no chance of stopping the quarterback on a run. The average quarterback has a mass of 100 kg. The smaller size defensive linemen have a mass of 113 kg.

a. If on the play in question, the quarterback was able to run 12.5 meters in 0.6 seconds, with an average velocity of 7.4 m/s what would his applied force be?
b. What would the top speed of the defensive lineman have to be less than, in order for him NOT to have enough force to stop the quarterback?

12.5 meters in 0.6 seconds, average speed of 7.4m/s? Oooookkayy Bill Nye :jerk:

he said velocity. did you take a physics class in college?

No... :embarrassed:

But, saying that he covered 12.5 meters in a fraction of a second, and only ended up 4.44 meters from where he started seems odd. Also, we don't know how fast the quarterback was running when contact was made, whether he was accelerating, or at what angle the contact was made. I'll go ahead and mark this problem NEI.
:adios:

Offline The Tonya Harding of Twitter Users Creep

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Re: Can someone please help me?
« Reply #7 on: February 09, 2015, 09:45:54 AM »




An announcer at an NFL playoff game made a comment that the defensive line was so small that they had no chance of stopping the quarterback on a run. The average quarterback has a mass of 100 kg. The smaller size defensive linemen have a mass of 113 kg.

a. If on the play in question, the quarterback was able to run 12.5 meters in 0.6 seconds, with an average velocity of 7.4 m/s what would his applied force be?
b. What would the top speed of the defensive lineman have to be less than, in order for him NOT to have enough force to stop the quarterback?

12.5 meters in 0.6 seconds, average speed of 7.4m/s? Oooookkayy Bill Nye :jerk:

he said velocity. did you take a physics class in college?

No... :embarrassed:

But, saying that he covered 12.5 meters in a fraction of a second, and only ended up 4.44 meters from where he started seems odd. Also, we don't know how fast the quarterback was running when contact was made, whether he was accelerating, or at what angle the contact was made. I'll go ahead and mark this problem NEI.

yeah, those are all very important questions. also, why a college professor is asking football questions in metric units? should be able to do simple unit conversions by now, it seems cruel to make students do it.

i would assume:

A- the QB started from 0 m/s and is not accelerating at the time of contact, neither was the DL.
B- the angle of contact is negligible (i think?) if you assume all of their force is perpendicular to the field.

pretty awful physics problem. something tracy tuttle would come up with because there is no way known EMAW/physics stud tim bolton would dish out a problem like this.
I think what my friend Mitch is trying to say is that true love is blind.

Offline CHONGS

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Re: Can someone please help me?
« Reply #8 on: February 09, 2015, 11:14:14 AM »
So this QB could have ran backwards for about 0.24 seconds (with a constant acceleration of 134 m/s^2) covering about 4 m, "instantaneously" stopped and turned direction (exerting a force of about 26,800 N or about 1.5 times the average force of a baseball being hit by a bat)  then ran forward for about 0.35 seconds (with a constant acceleration of 134 m/s^2) covering the last 8.5 m.

:dunno:

Offline _33

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Re: Can someone please help me?
« Reply #9 on: February 09, 2015, 11:28:41 AM »
So this QB could have ran backwards for about 0.24 seconds (with a constant acceleration of 134 m/s^2) covering about 4 m, "instantaneously" stopped and turned direction (exerting a force of about 26,800 N or about 1.5 times the average force of a baseball being hit by a bat)  then ran forward for about 0.35 seconds (with a constant acceleration of 134 m/s^2) covering the last 8.5 m.

:dunno:

I miss Daniel Sams   :frown:

Offline Trim

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Re: Can someone please help me?
« Reply #10 on: February 09, 2015, 12:53:32 PM »
I'm not that kind of scientist.

Offline Trogdor

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Re: Can someone please help me?
« Reply #11 on: February 09, 2015, 01:46:31 PM »




An announcer at an NFL playoff game made a comment that the defensive line was so small that they had no chance of stopping the quarterback on a run. The average quarterback has a mass of 100 kg. The smaller size defensive linemen have a mass of 113 kg.

a. If on the play in question, the quarterback was able to run 12.5 meters in 0.6 seconds, with an average velocity of 7.4 m/s what would his applied force be?
b. What would the top speed of the defensive lineman have to be less than, in order for him NOT to have enough force to stop the quarterback?

12.5 meters in 0.6 seconds, average speed of 7.4m/s? Oooookkayy Bill Nye :jerk:

he said velocity. did you take a physics class in college?

No... :embarrassed:

But, saying that he covered 12.5 meters in a fraction of a second, and only ended up 4.44 meters from where he started seems odd. Also, we don't know how fast the quarterback was running when contact was made, whether he was accelerating, or at what angle the contact was made. I'll go ahead and mark this problem NEI.

yeah, those are all very important questions. also, why a college professor is asking football questions in metric units? should be able to do simple unit conversions by now, it seems cruel to make students do it.

i would assume:

A- the QB started from 0 m/s and is not accelerating at the time of contact, neither was the DL.
B- the angle of contact is negligible (i think?) if you assume all of their force is perpendicular to the field.

pretty awful physics problem. something tracy tuttle would come up with because there is no way known EMAW/physics stud tim bolton would dish out a problem like this.

Pls no
@Trogdor_gE