thanks!
A plane is forced to make an emergency landing. After landing, the passengers are instructed to exit using an emergency slide, of length 6 metres, which is inclined at an angle of 60 degrees to the vertical. Passenger Jay has mass 75 kg. The coefficient of friction between Jay and the slide is 1/5. The plane came to rest so that the end of the slide is 2 metres vertically above level ground.
a) How far horizontally from the end of the slide does Jay land?
b) Find the magnitude of Jay's momentum in kg m/s, when he hits the ground.
I will describe the method.
* Your are firstly concerned with Jay's motion on the slide. This stage of the problem is your typical inclined plane problem with a coefficient of friction.
* resolve your forces (weight, normal reaction and friction) along the slide (x direction) and perpendicular to the plane (y-direction)
* apply Newtons 1st Law in the y-direction to find the Normal reaction force, and hence calculate the Friction force
* apply Newtons second law in the x-direction to calculate the acceleration
* you now have a kinematics problem for the slide. Constant acceleration (from previous step), initial velocity zero, distance travelled 6m. Use the appropriate formulas to determine the final velocity at the bottom of the slide.
* you now have a projectile motion problem, as Jay takes-off from the bottom of the slide, at a known angle and speed (as per previous step)
* resolve the take-off velocity into its horizontal and vertical components.
* use the vertical component component of the velocity, the known constant acceleration, g, and the known distance travelled (vertical drop) to determine 1) the time taken for the vertical drop and 2) the final velocity in the vertical direction. Both of these quantities will be required later.
* use the time for the vertical drop, determined in the previous step, and multiply this by the (constant) horizontal component of the take-off velocity. This is the answer to question a)
* for question b) you use geometry (Pythagoras) to determine the speed with which Jay hits the ground. You already know the horizontal speed, it never changed since take-off, and the vertical speed when he hit the ground was found earlier. Find the resultant speed and multiply by the mass to determine the momentum.