To find the distance the car travels while it is accelerating uniformly, you can use the following kinematic equation:
Distance=Initial Velocity×Time+12×Acceleration×Time2 ext{Distance} = ext{Initial Velocity} imes ext{Time} + frac{1}{2} imes ext{Acceleration} imes ext{Time}^2Distance=Initial Velocity×Time+21×Acceleration×Time2
Given: Initial Velocity (uuu) = 20 m/s Acceleration (aaa) = 3 m/s² Time (ttt) = 5 s
Now, plug these values into the equation:
Distance=20 m/s×5 s+12×3 m/s2×(5 s)2 ext{Distance} = 20 , ext{m/s} imes 5 , ext{s} + frac{1}{2} imes 3 , ext{m/s}^2 imes (5 , ext{s})^2Distance=20m/s×5s+21×3m/s2×(5s)2
Distance=100 m+12×3 m/s2×25 s2 ext{Distance} = 100 , ext{m} + frac{1}{2} imes 3 , ext{m/s}^2 imes 25 , ext{s}^2Distance=100m+21<span class="ms