A race car traveling at +55m/s is uniformly accelerated to a velocity of +24 m/s over an 8.9-s interval. What is its displacement during this time

average velocity * time

[(55 + 24) / 2] * 8.9 = ? ... meters

suspect you mean 5.5 m/s

To find the displacement of the race car during this time interval, we can use the formula:

\(s = ut + \frac{1}{2}at^2\)

Where:
s = displacement
u = initial velocity
t = time interval
a = acceleration

Given:
u = +55 m/s (initial velocity)
v = +24 m/s (final velocity)
t = 8.9 s (time interval)

First, we need to find the acceleration (a). We can use the formula:

\(v = u + at\)

Rearranging the formula:

\(a = \frac{v - u}{t}\)

Substituting the values:

\(a = \frac{24 - 55}{8.9}\)

\(a = \frac{-31}{8.9}\)

Now, substituting the values of u, t, and a in the displacement formula:

\(s = (55)(8.9) + \frac{1}{2}\left(\frac{-31}{8.9}\right)(8.9)^2\)

\(s = 489.5 + \frac{-31}{2}(8.9)\)

\(s = 489.5 - 138.95\)

\(s = 350.55\) m

Therefore, the displacement of the race car during this time interval is 350.55 meters.

To find the displacement of the race car, we can use the formula for displacement:

Displacement = (Final velocity - Initial velocity) × Time

Given:
Initial velocity (u) = +55 m/s
Final velocity (v) = +24 m/s
Time (t) = 8.9 s

Substituting the values into the formula:

Displacement = (24 m/s - 55 m/s) × 8.9 s

To calculate the displacement, we first need to find the change in velocity, which is the difference between the final and the initial velocities:

Change in velocity = Final velocity - Initial velocity
= 24 m/s - 55 m/s
= -31 m/s

Now we can substitute the values:

Displacement = (-31 m/s) × 8.9 s

Multiply the velocity by the time:

Displacement = -275.9 m

The negative sign indicates that the displacement is in the opposite direction of the initial velocity. Therefore, the race car has a displacement of -275.9 meters during this time interval.