<span>A gymnast with mass m1 = 43 kg is on a balance beam that sits on (but is not attached to) two supports. The beam has a mass m2 = 115 kg and length L = 5 m. Each support is 1/3 of the way from each end. Initially the gymnast stands at the left end of the beam.
1)What is the force the left support exerts on the beam?
2)What is the force the right support exerts on the beam?
3)How much extra mass could the gymnast hold before the beam begins to tip?
Now the gymnast (not holding any additional mass) walks directly above the right support.
4)What is the force the left support exerts on the beam?
5)What is the force the right support exerts on the beam?</span>
0 mark is your answer because you want to start at 0
Not what I'd call 'fast' at all.
Speed = (distance covered) / (time to cover the distance) .
Speed = (5 meters) / (10 seconds)
<em>Speed = 0.5 meter per second</em> .
That's like about 1.1 mile per hour .
Normal walking speed is considered to be around 1.4 m/s ... about 3.1 mph, or 14 meters in 10 seconds.
I've got a grandson who hasn't even turned 1 yet. He crawls and doesn't walk, but if you only cover 5m in 10s, he'd leave you in the dust pretty quick.