A bear running initial speed of 4m/s accelerates uniformly for 18s. What is the bears max speed if it travels 135m during the 18s of acceleration

average speed=135/18

average=(Vf+Vi)/2

set them equal, solve for Vf

11 m/s

To find the bear's maximum speed, we can use the equation of motion:

v^2 = u^2 + 2as

Where:
v = final velocity (maximum speed)
u = initial velocity (4 m/s)
a = acceleration
s = distance traveled during acceleration (135 m)

First, let's find the acceleration (a):
We can use the formula a = (v - u) / t, where t is the time taken (18 s).

Substituting the given values:
a = (v - 4) / 18

Next, we can substitute the value of acceleration (a) into the distance formula: s = ut + 1/2at^2

135 = 4*18 + 1/2 * a * 18^2

By multiplying and rearranging, we get:

135 = 72 + 162a

Rearranging further:

162a = 135 - 72
162a = 63
a = 63 / 162
a = 0.3889 m/s^2 (approximately)

Now, substituting the value of acceleration (0.3889 m/s^2) into the formula v^2 = u^2 + 2as:

v^2 = 4^2 + 2 * 0.3889 * 135

v^2 = 16 + 106

v^2 = 122

Taking the square root of both sides to solve for v:

v = √122

v ≈ 11.0457 m/s

Therefore, the bear's maximum speed is approximately 11.0 m/s (rounded to one decimal place).