Physics question help?

An unmarked police car travelling at a constant 80.0 km/h is passed by a speeder
travelling at 100.0 km/h. Precisely 1.0 s after the speeder passes, the police steps on the accelerator. If the police car’s acceleration is 2.0 m/s^2, how much time passes before the police car overtakes the speeder (assumed moving at a constant speed)?

1 Answer
Mar 27, 2017

The velocity of police car

v_p=80km"/"h=(80xx10^3)/3600m"/"s=200/9m"/"s

The velocity of the speeder

v_s=100km"/"h=(100xx10^3)/3600m"/"s=250/9m"/"s

1.0 s after the speeder passes the police car the later starts accelerating @ 2m"/"s^2.

Within this 1.0 s the speeder goes (250/9-200/9)m=50/9m ahead of the police car. Let the police car reaches the speeder again after t sec, it starts accelerating.

The distance covered by the police car during t sec after it accelerting @a=2m"/"s^2

S_p=v_pxxt+1/2at^2=200/9t+1/2*2*t^2

=200/9t+t^2

The distance covered by the speeder during the same t sec will be

S_s=250/9t

By the condition of the problem

S_p-S_s=50/9

=>t^2+200/9t-250/9t=50/9

=>9t^2-50t-50=0

=>t=(50+sqrt(50^2+4*9*50))/18s=6.42s

So if T represets the total time passed before the police car overtakes the speeder then

T=1sec+6.42s=7.42s