Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
The Bobsleigh event
The "bobsleigh" is just a fancy sled.
Teams of two or four athletes push the sled
from a standing start, then jump into it and
coast down to the bottom of the track.
The total mass of the sled plus its crew is limited
to M = 630 kg for 4-man teams, or 390 kg for 2-man teams.
At the 2006 Torino games, competitors are sliding
down a track built in Cesana, Italy. Click on the
image below for a larger, annotated version.
Some details of this track:
Length: 1,435 m
Start Altitude: 1,683 m
Finish Altitude: 1,569 m
Number of Curves: 19
- Under ideal conditions, what is the maximum speed a sled could reach
at the end of the track?
- How much work does gravity do on a 4-man sled during the race?
- Under ideal conditions,
which should take less time to
run the race: a 2-man sled or a 4-man sled?
Explain.
- Under realistic conditions,
which should take less time to
run the race: a 2-man sled or a 4-man sled?
Explain.
- The top speed of the sleds is about
v = 36 m/s.
When a sled moving at that speed goes around
the turn labelled "T" above, what is its
centripetal acceleration?
Express your answer in m/s^2 and in gees.
- Suppose the actual speed at the finish line is about
30 m/s.
How much work has friction done on the sled?
- Estimate the coefficient of kinetic friction
between sled and ice.
- During the start, a 4-man team pushes the empty
sled (mass about 250 kg) a distance
of about 65 meters in about 5 seconds.
What is the average acceleration of the sled
during the start? What is the average force
exerted on the sled by the team?
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Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.