Friction provides the force needed for a car to travel around a flat, circular race track. What is the maximum speed at which a car can safely travel if the radius of the track is 85.0 m and the coefficient of friction is 0.38?

To find the maximum speed at which a car can safely travel around a circular track, we need to consider the centripetal force provided by friction.

The centripetal force is given by the equation:

F = m * (v^2 / r)

Where:
F is the centripetal force
m is the mass of the car
v is the velocity of the car
r is the radius of the circular track

In this case, the centripetal force is provided by friction, so we can substitute F with the frictional force:

F_friction = μ * m * g

Where:
F_friction is the frictional force
μ is the coefficient of friction
m is the mass of the car
g is the acceleration due to gravity

Set the two equations equal to each other:

μ * m * g = m * (v^2 / r)

We can cancel out the mass of the car (m) from both sides of the equation:

μ * g = v^2 / r

Now solve for v, the maximum velocity:

v = √(μ * g * r)

Given:
μ = 0.38 (coefficient of friction)
g ≈ 9.8 m/s^2 (acceleration due to gravity)
r = 85.0 m (radius of the track)

v = √(0.38 * 9.8 * 85.0)
v ≈ √316.93
v ≈ 17.82 m/s

Therefore, the maximum speed at which the car can safely travel is approximately 17.82 m/s.