Energy#
Example 1: pulling a wagon of, what else: apples.#
The Questions:
a) How much work is done by a force of 20 N on a wagon full of apples with a combined mass of 10 kg if it’s pulled along a frictionless floor for a distance of 10 m?
b) What is the kinetic energy gained by the wagon and apples?
c) If it starts from rest, what is its speed after that distance?
![../../_images/applecart.png](../../_images/applecart.png)
The Answers:
a) Work is the product of the force and the distance, so
b) The kinetic energy change is equal to the work (remember, it started from rest):
c) We know the kinetic energy, so we can calculate the velocity:
Is this reasonable? That’s about 14 mph. That force of 20 N is not quite 5 pounds. Imagine that you hung a 5 pound weight over a pulley and set the wagon on a sheet of ice (no friction). Here’s the situation drawn about to scale.
![../../_images/applecartweight.png](../../_images/applecartweight.png)
I think I could imagine that this thing would be moving pretty fast over that distance.