Two particles move in a straight line together from rest, find the velocity at time = #t#?

Two particles #A# and #B# start to move at the same instant from a point #O#. The particles move in the same direction along the same straight line. The acceleration of #A# at time t #s# after starting to move is #a# #ms^-2#,
where #a = 0.05 − 0.0002t#.

Find #A#’s velocity when #t = 200# and when #t = 500#.

2 Answers
Aug 10, 2017

I got
#v_"200" = 2m*s^-1#
and,
#v_"500" = -25m*s^-1#

Explanation:

My problem here is that I think the mark scheme is wrong. I'm busy preparing for my AS Levels and this is from a Mechanics 1 Paper from 2015. The mark scheme answer to this is the following.

#v_"t" = 0.05t - 0.0001t^2#

then,

#v_"200" = 6m*s^-1#

and,

#v_"500" = 0m*s^-1#

Notice how in the equation they use 0.0001 instead of 0.0002. Did I miss something here or is the mark scheme wrong?

Aug 11, 2017

You are trying to find the velocity from the acceleration, where acceleration is the derivative of velocity. Therefore, the velocity can be found by integrating #a#. The integration looks like this:

#v(t)=int(0.05-0.0002t)dt#

#=>v(t)=0.05t-(0.0002t^2*1/2)#

I believe that forgetting the #1/2# is your problem!

This gives you:

#v(t)=0.05t-0.0001t^2#

Then you can put in your values for #t# :)