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Passing through zero (Posted on 2003-01-19) Difficulty: 2 of 5
A car is travelling in one direction at 80 km/h and a fly is coming from the opposite direction at 5km/h. (So its velocity is -5 km/h, since it's in the opposite direction.)

The fly hits the windshield of the car and is now travelling at 80km/h. In order for the fly to achieve the speed of 80km/h it's speed must have passed from -5km/h to 80km/h. (Meaning it must pass through the speed of zero) Therefore if the fly passes through a speed of 0km/h and the car is in contact with the fly the car must also pass through that speed of 0km/h.

This seems to mean that everytime a car gets hit by a fly it will completely stop. Why is this not so?

See The Solution Submitted by Alan    
Rating: 3.2222 (9 votes)

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
re(2): Not a solution | Comment 6 of 15 |
(In reply to re: Not a solution by fwaff)

Yes, I am confusing velocity and speed. Fwaff, thanks for setting me straight. :-)
  Posted by E Woodford on 2003-01-20 04:48:23

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