- #1
uSee2
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- Homework Statement
- An ideal massless spring is hung from the ceiling and a pan suspension of total mass M is suspended from the end of
the spring. A piece of clay, also of mass M, is then dropped from a height H onto the pan and sticks to it.
Express all
algebraic answers in terms of the given quantities and fundamental constants.
(a) Determine the speed of the clay at the instant it hits the pan.
(b) Determine the speed of the clay and pan just after the clay strikes it.
(c) After the collision, the apparatus comes to rest at a distance H/2 below the current position. Determine the
spring constant of the attached spring. (d) Determine the resulting period of oscillation
- Relevant Equations
- ##U_g = mgh##
##KE = 0.5mv^2##
I have successfully completed parts A, and B, however, I am confused on Part C. Here was my attempt and the answer key's attempt:
My attempt:
Since I correctly knew the speed after the collision, and the gravitational potential energy after the collision if I set h=0 at when it was at rest temporarily, then the change in spring potential energy is equal to the sum of the KE and Gravitational PE combined. Since when it is at rest at the bottom is has none of those except spring Potential Energy.
As such:
##KE + PE_g = \Delta PE_s##
This is where my attempt and key's attempt starts to branch off.
They stated that ##\Delta PE_s = \frac 1 2 k(\frac H 2)^2##
I stated that ##\Delta PE_s = \frac 1 2 kHx_i + \frac 1 8 kH^2## (Since if calculated manually, that is what ##\Delta PE_s## is equal to, I did my calculating below)
where ##x_i## is initial stretch before the collision to account for the initial stretch of the spring when the pan was just hanging on it before the collision.
They specifically stated the reason why they ignored the initial stretch of the spring was:
"Even though the initial current rest position immediately after the collision has an unknown initial stretch to begin with due to the weight of the tray and contains spring energy, we can set this as the zero spring energy position and use the additional stretch distance H/2 given to equate the conversion of kinetic and gravitational energy after the collision into the additional spring energy gained at the end of stretch. "
However I don't think that this is true, since if calculated using
##\Delta PE_s = PE_{sf} - PE_{si}##
Where:
##PE_{sf} = \frac 1 2 k(x_i + \frac H 2)^2## Spring PE finally
##PE_{si} = \frac 1 2 kx_i^2## Spring PE initially
it does not yield:
##\Delta PE_s = \frac 1 2 k(\frac H 2)^2##
If multiplied out the correct change in ##PE_s## is:
##\Delta PE_s = \frac 1 2 kHx_i + \frac 1 8 kH^2##
My question is, why could the key ignore the initial spring potential energy and set it at the "zero" point? Wouldn't the initial stretch need to be somehow accounted for?
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