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PLEASE ANSWER PART C&D Seat belts and air bags save lives by reducing the forces

ID: 2165761 • Letter: P

Question

PLEASE ANSWER PART C&D

Seat belts and air bags save lives by reducing the forces exerted on the driver and passengers in an automobile collision. Cars are designed with a "crumple zone" in the front of the car. In the event of an impact, the passenger compartment decelerates over a distance of about 1 m as the front of the car crumples. An occupant restrained by seat belts and air bags decelerates with the car. By contrast, an unrestrained occupant keeps moving forward with no loss of speed (Newton's first law!) until hitting the dashboard or windshield. These are unyielding surfaces, and the unfortunate occupant then decelerates over a distance of only about 5 mm. A 58kg person is in a head-on collision. The car's speed at impact is 18m/s. Estimate the net force on the person if he or she is wearing a seat belt and if the air bag deploys. Express your answer to two significant figures and include the appropriate units. Significant Figures Feedback: Your answer 9395 N was either rounded differently or used a different number of significant figures than required for this part. Estimate the net force that ultimately stops the person if he or she is not restrained by a seat belt or air bag. Express your answer to two significant figures and include the appropriate units. How do the force in part A compare to the person's weight? Express your answer using two significant figures. How do the force in part B compare to the person's weight? Express your answer using two significant figures.

Explanation / Answer

c) 9400/(mg) = 9400/(58x9.8) = 16.53


d) and same here gets 32x10^4

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