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asleight
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Homework Statement
(1) A uniform wire with mass M and length L is bent into a semicircle. Find the magnitude of the gravitational force this wire exerts on a point with mass m placed at the center of curvature of the semicircle.
(2) Mass M is distributed uniformly along a line of length 2L. A particle with mass m is at a point that is a distance a above the center of the line on its perpendicular bisector. For the gravitational force that the line exerts on the particle, calculate the components perpendicular and parallel to the line.
Homework Equations
(1,2) [tex]\vec{F}=\frac{GMm\hat{r}}{r^2}[/tex]
The Attempt at a Solution
(1) Looking at the system, I notice that the radius between the wire and the point mass is always [tex]L/\pi[/tex], so, subsituting into the general equation:
[tex]\vec{F}=\frac{\pi^2GMm\hat{L}}{L^2}[/tex]. This isn't the right answer. Then, I tried solving for the radius between the center of mass of the semi-circle and and point mass to get:
[tex]\frac{9\pi^4MmG\hat{L}}{16L^2}[/tex].
(2) I've approached this problem from the rod's center of mass but the force depends on the variable L; then, I tried attacking it from the center of mass of each of the halves of the rod and got some ridiculously complicated form for the gravitational force and it didn't work. What bodies and masses am I looking at for this one?