Hooke's law is a law of physics that states that the force (F) needed to extend or compress a spring by some distance (x) scales linearly with respect to that distance—that is, Fs = kx, where k is a constant factor characteristic of the spring (i.e., its stiffness), and x is small compared to the total possible deformation of the spring. The law is named after 17th-century British physicist Robert Hooke. He first stated the law in 1676 as a Latin anagram. He published the solution of his anagram in 1678 as: ut tensio, sic vis ("as the extension, so the force" or "the extension is proportional to the force"). Hooke states in the 1678 work that he was aware of the law since 1660.
Hooke's equation holds (to some extent) in many other situations where an elastic body is deformed, such as wind blowing on a tall building, and a musician plucking a string of a guitar. An elastic body or material for which this equation can be assumed is said to be linear-elastic or Hookean.
Hooke's law is only a first-order linear approximation to the real response of springs and other elastic bodies to applied forces. It must eventually fail once the forces exceed some limit, since no material can be compressed beyond a certain minimum size, or stretched beyond a maximum size, without some permanent deformation or change of state. Many materials will noticeably deviate from Hooke's law well before those elastic limits are reached.
On the other hand, Hooke's law is an accurate approximation for most solid bodies, as long as the forces and deformations are small enough. For this reason, Hooke's law is extensively used in all branches of science and engineering, and is the foundation of many disciplines such as seismology, molecular mechanics and acoustics. It is also the fundamental principle behind the spring scale, the manometer, the galvanometer, and the balance wheel of the mechanical clock.
The modern theory of elasticity generalizes Hooke's law to say that the strain (deformation) of an elastic object or material is proportional to the stress applied to it. However, since general stresses and strains may have multiple independent components, the "proportionality factor" may no longer be just a single real number, but rather a linear map (a tensor) that can be represented by a matrix of real numbers.
In this general form, Hooke's law makes it possible to deduce the relation between strain and stress for complex objects in terms of intrinsic properties of the materials it is made of. For example, one can deduce that a homogeneous rod with uniform cross section will behave like a simple spring when stretched, with a stiffness k directly proportional to its cross-section area and inversely proportional to its length.
A 1300-kg car starts at rest and rolls down a hill from a height of 10.0-m. It moves across a level surface and collides with a spring-loaded guard rail designed to bring the car safely to a stop. The spring has a spring constant of 2.0E6N/m.
Neglecting any losses due to friction, and ignoring...
Homework Statement
A hydrogen chloride molecule may be modeled as a hydrogen atom (mass: 1.67 x10^-27 kg ) on a spring; the other end of the spring is attached to a rigid wall (the massive chlorine atom).
If the minimum photon energy that will promote this molecule to its first excited...
The spring constant is a measure of the stiffness of the spring. By using a stiffer spring, it results in having a larger k (spring constant) values.
How would this change affect the values for the elastic and gravitational potential energies?
Spring Constant off by a factor of two!
Hey everyone, I am doing a lab in which the objective is to find the spring constant of a spring scale, however when doing my calculations, the number I got was off by a factor of two from the supposed answer calculated from Hooke's Law. Here's how I did...
A bungee jumper, whose mass is 87 kg, jumps from a tall platform. After reaching his lowest point, he continues to oscillate up and down, reaching the low point two more times in 8.5 s. Ignoring air resistance and assuming that the bungee cord is an ideal spring, determine its spring constant.
Multiple Choice
Question: What are the units of the spring constant K?
I. N/m^2
II. kg/s^2
III. J/m^2
Choices:
A. I only
B. II only
C. III only
D. I and II
E. II and III
I cannot find it in my textbook for some reason...
I've been being confused lately as to the 2 methods. The example I'm thinking of is when a weight of mass m is hung on a spring and it stretches x meters.
First of all, I know you can equate the spring force (kx) to the force of gravity (mg), to get
k = mg/x
But is it also possible to...
Homework Statement
I have a vertical hoop of radius R. A spring with spring constant k and relaxed length 0 is attached to the top of the hoop. A block of mass m is attached to the spring and dropped. Assuming the motion is a linear vertical oscillation between the top and bottom of the...
Homework Statement
When a 9.10 kg mass is placed on top of a vertical spring, the spring compresses 4.22 cm.
Find the force constant of the spring.Homework Equations
F=kx
F=maThe Attempt at a Solution
I know that Fgravity should =Fspring so I set the two above equations equal to each other and...
Homework Statement
A cube of mass m = 5 kg is released from rest and falls a height of h1 = 2 m before hitting a vertical spring which brings the cube to a stop (momentarily) after being compressed by h2 = 50 cm...
Homework Statement
When a mass m is placed on the end of a spring in the vertical position, it stretches the spring a distance d. Find the spring constant k.
Homework Equations
Force of a spring = Fs = -ky
Elastic Potential Energy = Us= (1/2)ky^2
Gravitational Potential Energy = Ug =...
Hey guys. I'm trying to figure out the spring constant of a bungee cord.
Weight = 80kg
Gravity = 9.8m/s/s
Length of cord = 10m
Length of jump = 50m
I've been shown two different methods. And I don't know which one is correct because they give two different answers :/
1.
k = F/x =...
Homework Statement
Two springs are set up on a table. The longer spring has a spring constant of 225 N/m and an initial length of 42.0 cm. The shorter spring has a spring constant of 675 N/m and an initial length of 28.0 cm. How far above the table is an 8.50-kg ball when it reaches its...
A .20- kg mass attached to a spring is pulled back horizontally across a table so that the potential energy of the system is increased from zero to 120 J. Ignoring friction, what is the kinetic energy of the system after the mass is released and has moved to a point where the potential energy...
Homework Statement
When a spring (with spring constant k)and length L is cut into 2 identical parts,determine the new spring constant of the springs
Homework Equations
F=-kx
The Attempt at a Solution
I only know the spring constant is a measure of the stiffness of a spring and (I...
Homework Statement
(a) If the length of the Achilles tendon increases 0.51 cm when the force exerted on it by the muscle increases from 3400 N to 5800 N, what is the "spring constant" of the tendon?
1Your answer is incorrect.
(b) How much work is done by the muscle in stretching the tendon...
Homework Statement
In a physics lab experiment, a spring clamped to the table shoots a 22 g ball horizontally. When the spring is compressed 18 cm, the ball travels horizontally 5.2 m and lands on the floor 1.5 m below the point at which it left the spring.
Homework Equations
Us=...
Homework Statement
A 2.60 g spider is dangling at the end of a silk thread. You can make the spider bounce up and down on the thread by tapping lightly on his feet with a pencil. You soon discover that you can give the spider the largest amplitude on his little bungee cord if you tap exactly...
Homework Statement
Find the average spring constant (k) of a water-balloon launcher, and use that to find the distance to pull back the launcher and launch a balloon of a certain weight a certain distance. I'm at the "finding k" part.
Diagram attached.
Known:
Weight of balloon (Fw, N), mass...
Q. An object of mass o.4kg slides at 8m/s across a frictionless path before striking one end of a spring that is fixed at the other end. the spring constant is 80N/m. the maximum distance, in metres, by which the spring compressed is : ans?
I a not sure wether to use hookes law (f=ks)...
Homework Statement
determine the spring constant state results in SI units.
here is the chart. this isn't making sense to me.
Scale Reading vs x coordinate
1.05 N--55 cm
.75 N---45 cm
.90 N--50 cm
1.35 N--65 cm
1.20 N--60 cm
.6 N--40 cm
thats all the info i have. I'm just not...
Homework Statement
Consider a segment of a molecule of DNA that is a coil with an overall length of 2.1*10^-6 m. If the ends of the molecule become singly ionized (one end loosing a single electron and the other end gaining a single electron) the helical molecule acts like a spring and...
Help Spring Avarage acceleration and Spring Constant in a Spacecraft !
Homework Statement
In NASA’s current concept, the lander has 4 legs, each with a plate on the end that will set firmly on the surface. Each leg has a spring to act as a shock absorber and each shock will compress 30 cm...
Okay. I have been at this for two nights now. I want to derive, step by step, the equivalent spring constant of a Beam cantilevered at both ends with a loading at its center.
Here is a schematic with A=B=L/2
Now I would like to use superposition to find the deflection at L/2 due to the...
A spring 150-cm long extends to a length of 155 cm when it supports a load of 55 N. Determine the spring constant.
F = kx
x1= 1.5 m
x2= 1.55 m
F = 55 N
k = ?
Now, "x" in F = kx is x2-x1, right? So the formula would be 55 = .05k?
Sorry, I know this is simple, I just am having a momentary lapse.
Homework Statement
A 187 g block is launched by compressing a spring of constant k=200N/m a distance of 15 cm. The spring is mounted horizontally, and the surface directly under it is frictionless. But beyond the equilibrium position of the spring end, the surface has coefficient of friction...
Hi,
I've just been thinking about this too much and managed to confuse myself.
Spring constant for a vertical spring: k=mg/\Delta
Is it the same for a horizontal spring on a frictionless surface?
Thanks!
Homework Statement
You shoot a 49 g pebble straight up with a catapult whose spring constant is 320 N/m. The catapult is initially stretched by 0.30 m. How high above the starting point does the pebble fly? Ignore air resistance.
Homework Equations
Unsure?
The Attempt at a Solution...
Homework Statement
When a mass "m" is hung from the centre of a horizontal wire, length "L". How far will the centre of the wire stretch downwards, in terms of m, L, E (youngs modulus) and A (cross sectional area of wire)
Homework Equations
mg = Tcosθ
When m is the mass hung from...
Homework Statement
The ball launcher in a pinbgall machine has a spring that has a force constant of 36 N/cm. THe surface on which the ball moves is inclined theta=10.1 degrees with respect to the horizontal. If the spring is initially conressed 4.25 cm, find the launching speed of a .120 kg...
Here is a very basic question that I need help with.
Homework Statement
A spring has a spring constant (k) of 82 N/m. How far must the spring be compressed to store 35J of potential energy?
Homework Equations
I think it is: E = 1/2 kx^2
The Attempt at a Solution
I don't...
Homework Statement
I have a physics lab that I'm just not making any progress on. For this lab my group used a 314 g cart. Two springs were used, both attached to the cart, and one being stretched the other compressed. The cart was then ran horizontally and it's velocity was found.
I want...
1. Problem
A spring with a pointer attached is hanging next to a scale marked in millimeters. Three different packages are hung from the spring, in turn, as shown below.
(a) Which mark on the scale will the pointer indicate when no package is hung from the spring?
(a) ? mm
(b) What is the...
[b]1. A spring is hung from the ceiling. When a block is attached to its end, it stretches 2.0 cm before reaching its new equilibrium length. The block is then pulled down slightly and released. what is the frequency of the oscillation?
[b]2. The frequency is found by f= 1/2\pi...
Homework Statement
A compact car has a mass of 1200 kg. Assume that the car has one spring on each wheel, that the spring are identical, and that the mass is equally distributed over the four springs. draw a picture of the situation.
a) what is the spring constant of each spring if the...
Homework Statement
A 75 kg student is standing atop a spring in an elevator that is accelerating upward at 3.0m m/s2. The spring constant is 2700 N/m
By how much is the spring compressed?
Homework Equations
I know I have to use the spring constant formula in this
So 75kg*9.8m/s2=735N
And I...
1. Homework Statement
The left side of the figure shows a light (`massless') spring of length 0.340 m in its relaxed position. It is compressed to 67.0 percent of its relaxed length, and a mass M= 0.250 kg is placed on top and released from rest (shown on the right).
The mass then travels...
Could one of you mechanical geniuses please help out a dumb ol' elec engr? I've searched the boards for a few hrs now, but can't seem to get confidence in my answer to what should be a simple problem.
I'm trying to build a simple a simple tennis ball launcher to fire a ball out at 70mph --...
Homework Statement
A block of mass 1.50 kg is attached to one end of a horizontal spring, the other end of which is fixed to a vertical wall. The spring has a stifffness constant of 2000 N/m. The block slides without friction on a horizontal table, set close to the wall. Find the work done...
An elastic cord is 67.7 cm long when a weight of 58.7 N hangs from it and is 85.8 cm long when a weight of 88.1 N hangs froms it. What is te spring constant of this elastic cord?
how i know which is the long of the spring when it is in equilibrium to then calculate the sprin constant...
Well i remember doing this in physics class like 4 years ago, and it slipped my mind.
I basically am doing a project of taking like 20+ springs and comparing there spring constants.
Am all of this will be in a lab. And if i remember correctly k=(Newtons)/ meter
i know this is probably...
Homework Statement
In a 'worst-case' design scenario a 2000-kg elevator with broken cables is falling at 25m/s when it first contacts a cushioning spring at the bottom of the shaft. The spring is supposed to stop the elevator, compressing 3m as it does so. During the motion, a safety clamp...
Homework Statement
A mass of 50 kg falls 50 cm onto the platform of a spring scale and sticks. The platform comes to rest 10 cm below its initial position. The mass of the platform is 2 kg. Find the spring constant.
Homework Equations
The Attempt at a Solution
I thought of the...
Spring problem!
Homework Statement
A 1.60 kg block hangs from a spring. If a 400 g body is hung from the block, the spring is stretched 2.00 cm farther. What is the spring constant?
Homework Equations
Fsp=-kdeltas
The Attempt at a Solution
(2.0Kg)(9.8)/(0.02)=k
k-980 N/m...
Homework Statement
A bungee jumper, whose mass is 98 kg, jumps from a tall building. After reaching his lowest point, he continues to oscillate up and down, reaching the low point two more times in 9.3 s. Ignoring air resistance and assuming that the bungee cord is an ideal spring, determine...
Homework Statement
as drawn on the picture. a spring with spring constant k is connected to a fixed wall at one end, and the other end is connecting a proof mass. on the other side of the proof mass, there is a same spring connecting together.
what is the overall spring constant of the...
Homework Statement
Kate, a bungee jumper, wants to jump off the edge of a bridge that spans a river below. Kate has a mass m, and the surface of the bridge is a height h above the water. The bungee cord, which has length L when unstretched, will first straighten and then stretch as Kate falls...
1. A spring clamped to a table shoots a 20 g ball horizontally. When the spring is compressed 18 cm the ball travels horizontally 5.1 m and lands on the floor 1.7 m below the point at which it left the spring. What is the spring constant (in N/m)
2. I tried using k=mg/x (x being distance of...
Homework Statement
The spring constant (k) and uncertainty in the spring constant(sigma_k) have to be calculated with the values available for: period (T), number of oscillations (N), mass (m), time, slope and uncertainty in slope. The spring constant can be done with the first equation but...
A 20-kg mass was initially at rest, attached to the end of a vertically hanging spring. When given an initial downward velocity of 2 m/s from its equilibrium rest position, the mass was observed to attain a maximum displacement of 0.2m from its equilibrium position. What is the value of the...