Miranda, a satellite of Uranus, is shown in part a of the figure below. It can b
ID: 1310905 • Letter: M
Question
Miranda, a satellite of Uranus, is shown in part a of the figure below. It can be modeled as a sphere of radius 242 km and mass 6.68 1019 kg.
(a) Find the free-fall acceleration on its surface.
? m/s2
(b) A cliff on Miranda is 5.00 km high. It appears on the limb at the 11 o'clock position in part a of the figure above and is magnified in part b of the figure above. A devotee of extreme sports runs horizontally off the top of the cliff at 7.00 m/s. For what time interval is he in flight? (Ignore the difference in g between the lip and base of the cliff.)
? s
(c) How far from the base of the vertical cliff does he strike the icy surface of Miranda?
? m
(d) What is his vector impact velocity?
? m/s
?
Explanation / Answer
b) A cliff on Miranda is 5.00 km high. It appears on the limb at the 11 o'clock position in part a of the figure above and is magnified in part b of the figure above. A devotee of extreme sports runs horizontally off the top of the cliff at 7.00 m/s. For what time interval is he in flight? (Ignore the difference in g between the lip and base of the cliff.)
? s
(c) How far from the base of the vertical cliff does he strike the icy surface of Miranda?
? m
(d) What is his vector impact velocity?
? m/s
?