Answer :
(a) As it gets compressed by a distance x, the spring does
W = - 1/2 (52.1 N/m) x ²
of work on the object (negative because the restoring force exerted by the spring points in the opposite direction to the object's displacement). By the work-energy theorem, this work is equal to the change in the object's kinetic energy. At maximum compression x, the object's kinetic energy is zero, so
W = ∆K
- 1/2 (52.1 N/m) x ² = 0 - 1/2 (0.250 kg) (1.70 m/s)²
==> x ≈ 0.118 m
(b) Taking friction into account, the only difference is that more work is done on the object.
By Newton's second law, the net vertical force on the object is
∑ F = n - mg = 0
where n is the magnitude of the normal force of the track pushing up on the object. Solving for n gives
n = mg = 2.45 N
and from this we get the magnitude of kinetic friction,
f = µn = 0.120 (2.45 N) = 0.294 N
Now as the spring gets compressed, the frictional force points in the same direction as the restoring force, so it also does negative work on the object:
W (friction) = - (0.294 N) x
W (spring) = - 1/2 (52.1 N/m) x ²
==> W (total) = W (friction) + W (spring)
Solve for x :
- (0.294 N) x - 1/2 (52.1 N/m) x ² = 0 - 1/2 (0.250 kg) (1.70 m/s)²
==> x ≈ 0.112 m
For the 0.250 kg object moving along a horizontal track and collides with and compresses a light spring, with a spring constant of 52.1 N/m, we have:
a) The spring's maximum compression when the track is frictionless is 0.118 m.
b) The spring's maximum compression when the track is not frictionless, with a coefficient of kinetic friction of 0.120 is 0.112 m.
a) We can calculate the spring's compression when the object collides with it by energy conservation because the track is frictionless:
[tex] E_{i} = E_{f} [/tex]
[tex] \frac{1}{2}m_{o}v_{o}^{2} = \frac{1}{2}kx^{2} [/tex] (1)
Where:
[tex]m_{o}[/tex]: is the mass of the object = 0.250 kg
[tex]v_{o}[/tex]: is the velocity of the object = 1.70 m/s
k: is the spring constant = 52.1 N/m
x: is the distance of compression
After solving equation (1) for x, we have:
[tex] x = \sqrt{\frac{m_{o}v_{o}^{2}}{k}} = \sqrt{\frac{0.250 kg*(1.70 m/s)^{2}}{52.1 N/m}} = 0.118 m [/tex]
Hence, the spring's maximum compression is 0.118 m.
b) When the track is not frictionless, we can calculate the spring's compression by work definition:
[tex] W = \Delta E = E_{f} - E_{i} [/tex]
[tex] W = \frac{1}{2}kx^{2} - \frac{1}{2}m_{o}v_{o}^{2} [/tex] (2)
Work is also equal to:
[tex] W = F*d = F*x [/tex] (3)
Where:
F: is the force
d: is the displacement = x (distance of spring's compression)
The force acting on the object is given by the friction force:
[tex] F = -\mu N = -\mu m_{o}g [/tex] (4)
Where:
N: is the normal force = m₀g
μ: is the coefficient of kinetic friction = 0.120
g: is the acceleration due to gravity = 9.81 m/s²
The minus sign is because the friction force is in the opposite direction of motion.
After entering equations (3) and (4) into (2), we have:
[tex]-\mu m_{o}gx = \frac{1}{2}kx^{2} - \frac{1}{2}m_{o}v_{o}^{2}[/tex]
[tex]\frac{1}{2}kx^{2} - \frac{1}{2}m_{o}v_{o}^{2} + \mu m_{o}gx = 0[/tex]
[tex] \frac{1}{2}52.1 N/m*x^{2} - \frac{1}{2}0.250 kg*(1.70)^{2} + 0.120*0.250 kg*9.81 m/s^{2}*x = 0 [/tex]
Solving the above quadratic equation for x
[tex] x = 0.112 m [/tex]
Therefore, the spring's compression is 0.112 m when the track is not frictionless.
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I hope it helps you!
