Calculus: Early Transcendentals 8th Edition

Published by Cengage Learning
ISBN 10: 1285741552
ISBN 13: 978-1-28574-155-0

Chapter 6 - Section 6.4 - Work - 6.4 Exercises - Page 459: 13

Answer

a: $W=625$ ft-lb b: $W=\frac{1875}{4}$ ft-lb=$468.75$ ft-lb

Work Step by Step

The rope has a length of $50 ft$, we are given a weight of $0.5 \frac{lb}{ft}$, and the rope is elevated $120 ft$ above a building We first find the force that the rope exerts, then we can solve for a and b $F=\frac{lb}{ft}*displacement$ $F=(0.5)*(50-x)$ a: We are looking for the distance pulled up completely, where we use the length of the rope for the upper limit of the integral. $ W=\int_{0}^{50}(0.5)(50-x)dx = 625$ ft-lb b: We are looking for the distance pulled up halfway, where we take the length of the rope and half it, and use that for the upper limit of the integral. $\frac{50}{2}=25$ $ W=\int_{0}^{25}(0.5)(50-x)dx = \frac{1875}{4}$ ft-lb = $468.75$ ft-lb
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