Question 697502:  kinematic question:a highway patrol at rest is passed by a bus travelling at constant speed of 126 km/h.two seconds later the patrol car starts accelerates at a constant rate of 5m/s2 until it reaches a speed of 162 km/h.if the patrol car then maintains a constant speed of 162km/h , determine the distance travelled by the patrol car to overtake the bus.
 
 
thank you tutor. 
 Answer by KMST(5328)      (Show Source): 
You can  put this solution on YOUR website! I suspect you are taking physics in high school or college. 
However, to cover any possible situation, I'll add the physics "formulas" in parenthesis, 
but I will show the solution as if it was a problem for a fifth grader. 
A physics instructor may expect a different way to solve the problem, 
but I hope I found the simplest way, 
and I believe the simplest way is the best way. 
  
Some painful conversions seem needed, 
but the numbers were chosen so as to make this easier. 
 m/s 
 m/s 
  
Accelerating from   to  m/s at  m/s of speed increase per second takes 
  seconds. 
(  <-->   but for this case  ) 
  
While accelerating, the police car has an average speed of  m/s 
(because at constant acceleration, the average velocity is the average of the initial and final velocities) 
so in  s it covers a distance of  m 
( ) 
  
The distance ( , in meters) covered by the bus and also by the police car can be calculated from either point of view. 
( ) 
  
The bus is moving for   seconds at  m/s, covering a distance of 
  meters. 
  
During those   seconds, the police car is stopped for 2 seconds, 
covers  m for the next   seconds (while accelerating), 
and after those  first   seconds, 
moves at  m/s for the rest of the time (  seconds). 
The distance covered by the police car is 
  meters 
  
Because the same distance   is covered by the bus and by the car 
during the   seconds between the time the bus passes the patrol car and the time the patrol car overtakes the bus. 
  -->   -->   -->   -->   seconds. 
  
Substituting into   we get 
  -->   meters (about 1 km). 
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