Hyperloop acceleration

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If the hyperloop went from 0 to 107 miles an hour and back to 0 again in 500 metres, what would be the acceleration rate, 0-60 time?

Can someone work it out? :)

Presumably it envoles s =ut +1/2 at squared??
 
Soldato
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Fag packet no calculator about 6 seconds I think.

I got the acceleration assuming equal acceleration and deceleration as about 4.5m/s^2

An online tool tells me 4.5m/s^2 is abut 0-60 in 6 seconds

edit: willing to accept I'm wrong if anyone disagrees.
 
Caporegime
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If the hyperloop went from 0 to 107 miles an hour and back to 0 again in 500 metres, what would be the acceleration rate, 0-60 time?

Can someone work it out? :)

Presumably it envoles s =ut +1/2 at squared??

There's not enough information to calculate it, unless you make assumptions such as the acceleration and deceleration being constant and the same which is highly unlikely.
 
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Soldato
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There's not enough information to calculate it, unless you make assumptions such as the acceleration and deceleration being constant and the same which is highly unlikely.
I agree, much more likely a higher initial acceleration and longer coast stage. My calculation is effectively the minimum acceleration you could achieve it with but no the most likely.
 
Soldato
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Obviously a few assumptions required but my rough working:

107mph = 47.833 m/s

Assuming linear acceleration the average speed would be half of this (23.92m/s)

Assuming rates of acceleration and deceleration are equal you’d be accelerating over the first 250m. Covering 250m at an average speed of 23.92m/s would take 10.45 seconds

Accelerating from zero to 23.93m/s over 10.45 seconds with constant acceleration would require a rate of 2.28m/s^2

2.28m/s^2 would equate to about 0.23g which doesn’t sound particularly uncomfortable
 
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Similar to kaiowas calculation above, you could do it with an acceleration equivalent to around a car doing a 6 second 0-60 time, and then braking at a similar rate that the highway code assumes for a passenger car (albeit extrapolated up to 107mph as the higway code doesn't suggest stopping distances for that speed!)

Of course, it could be faster acceleration with a coast, but that's the min performance required
 
Caporegime
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I have to say I'm disappointed by the progress of this whole project tbh, a conventional motorbike does 400mph in normal air density without any of the risks of being in a vacuum or requiring massive infrastructure etc.
 
Soldato
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As others have said a question with way too many variables to even be able to assume a value. did it reach 107mph within 50m then travel at said speed until 400m before it started decelerating? There just isn't enough information to make an educated assumptive guess.
 
Caporegime
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How are they addressing the whole implosion problem ?



Good ol' atmospheric pressure, the amount of energy it can release and exert as force is mental.

Have a look at this video to have an idea of what could happen in the event of a sudden decompression:



As for the Hyperloop, this is in the same category as flying cars, quantum computing and fusion: always 30 years away. I'll believe it when I see it.
 
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