Suppose a 300–g kookaburra (a large kingfisher bird) picks up a 77.0–g snake and raises it 2.70 m from the ground to a branch. How much work did the bird do on the snake?

How much work did it do to raise its own center of mass to the branch?

F = M*g = 0.077 * 9.8 = 0.755 N.

Work = F*d.

To calculate the work done by the kookaburra on the snake and on itself, we need to use the formula:

Work = Force × Distance × cos(θ)

For the kookaburra lifting the snake:

1. Determine the force exerted by the kookaburra on the snake. The force can be calculated using the formula:

Force = mass × acceleration due to gravity

The mass of the snake is 77.0 g, which is 0.077 kg. The acceleration due to gravity is approximately 9.8 m/s².

Force = 0.077 kg × 9.8 m/s²

2. Calculate the distance the snake was raised, which is given as 2.70 m.

3. Since the force and distance are both vertical, the angle θ between them and the direction of motion is 0 degrees. The cosine of 0 degrees is 1.

Work = Force × Distance × cos(θ)

Plug in the values:

Work = (0.077 kg × 9.8 m/s²) × 2.70 m × 1

Simplify the equation:

Work = 2.0094 Joules (rounded to four decimal places)

So, the kookaburra did approximately 2.0094 Joules of work on the snake.

For the kookaburra lifting itself:

1. Determine the force exerted by the kookaburra on itself. The force can be calculated using the formula:

Force = mass × acceleration due to gravity

The mass of the kookaburra is 300 g, which is 0.300 kg. The acceleration due to gravity is approximately 9.8 m/s².

Force = 0.300 kg × 9.8 m/s²

2. Calculate the vertical distance the kookaburra raised itself, which is also given as 2.70 m.

3. Similar to the previous case, the angle θ between the force and distance is 0 degrees, and the cosine of 0 degrees is 1.

Work = Force × Distance × cos(θ)

Plug in the values:

Work = (0.300 kg × 9.8 m/s²) × 2.70 m × 1

Simplify the equation:

Work = 7.722 Joules

Therefore, the kookaburra did approximately 7.722 Joules of work to raise its own center of mass to the branch.