Genady Posted January 30, 2023 Posted January 30, 2023 @Saber I have to admit that the answer which for years I thought solves the puzzle, I have doubts about it now . I want to see where you and @Lorentz Jr go. If it turns to be the same answer, I'll share my doubts and we'll resolve them, hopefully.
Saber Posted January 30, 2023 Author Posted January 30, 2023 7 minutes ago, Genady said: @Saber I have to admit that the answer which for years I thought solves the puzzle, I have doubts about it now . I want to see where you and @Lorentz Jr go. If it turns to be the same answer, I'll share my doubts and we'll resolve them, hopefully. when mr Lorentz and you gave me hints i thought that your hints dont line up......but i was afraid to ask......im really confused now......
Lorentz Jr Posted January 30, 2023 Posted January 30, 2023 (edited) 1 hour ago, Saber said: Does that mean weighs on both sides reach to the bottom/tom simultaneously ? Yes, let's assume one cup and weight at each end goes around its nearest pulley at the same time. Let's turn the belt until the tops of the cups on either side of the belt are lined up, keeping the weights locked in place. Forget about the depths of the cups. There are N other cups on each side of the belt. Each cup on the right has a mass of water above it of volume hA, where h is the distance each weight can travel in its cup (assuming the weights are held in place by pistons instead of membranes), and A is the cross-sectional area of the cup. The corresponding volume above the weight on the left side is empty. Only air or a vacuum. Each of the 2N other cups moves a distance D/N, where D is the total depth of the belt. So the work done by the weight of the unbalanced water above each cup on the right is [math]mg(D/N) = \rho hAgD/N[/math], and the total work done by all the other cups is [math]\rho hAgD[/math]. But each weight on the ends has moved up a distance h. So the work done on the end cups is [math]2Mgh[/math], but we said [math]W=Mg[/math] has to be greater than [math]\rho g DA[/math] for the weights to stay down when they're on the left side, so the work done on the end cups is at least [math]2 \rho h DAg[/math], which is twice the work done by the other cups. So the belt had to do work on the end weights, i.e. it lost [math]\rho h DAg[/math] of whatever kinetic energy it had before the turn. Now we unlock the weights that just went around a pulley so they can fall into their new positions in their cups. Water pressure on the top/right weight will accelerate the weight, but some of the resulting kinetic energy will be lost when the weight stops moving (it's an inelastic collision with the cup), so it won't make up for the loss in raising the weight as it rounded the pulley. Edited January 30, 2023 by Lorentz Jr 1
Saber Posted January 30, 2023 Author Posted January 30, 2023 30 minutes ago, Lorentz Jr said: Yes, let's assume one cup and weight at each end goes around its nearest pulley at the same time. Let's turn the belt until the tops of the cups on either side of the belt are lined up, keeping the weights locked in place. Forget about the depths of the cups. There are N other cups on each side of the belt. Each cup on the right has a mass of water above it of volume hA, where h is the distance each weight can travel in its cup, and A is the cross-sectional area of the cup. The corresponding volume above the weight on the left side is empty. Only air or a vacuum. Each of the N other cups moves a distance D/N, where D is the total depth of the belt. So the work done by the weight of the unbalanced water above each cup is mg(D/N)=ρhAgD/N , and the total work done by all the other cups is ρhAgD . But each weight on the ends has moved up a distance h. So the work done on the end cups is 2Mgh, but we said W=Mg has to be greater than rhogDA for the weights to stay down when they're on the left side, so the work done on the end cups is at least 2rhohDAg , which is twice the work done by the other cups. So we lost rho h DAg of energy. Now we unlock the weights that just went around a pulley so they can fall into their new positions in their cups, but this doesn't help. The pressure on the bottom/left weight is greater than that on the top/right weight, so they won't help turn the belt. Honestly thats more than my understanding capacity to understand it @ once i have to read it a couple of times and concentrate on it.....to grasp it i
Lorentz Jr Posted January 30, 2023 Posted January 30, 2023 (edited) 7 minutes ago, Saber said: thats more than my understanding capacity to understand it The belt gets energy from the cups on the sides, but it has to give all the energy back in order to move the end weights from one side to the other. Edited January 30, 2023 by Lorentz Jr
Genady Posted January 30, 2023 Posted January 30, 2023 43 minutes ago, Lorentz Jr said: Now we unlock the weights that just went around a pulley so they can fall into their new positions in their cups. Water pressure on the top/right weight will accelerate the weight, but some of the resulting kinetic energy will be lost when the weight stops moving (it's an inelastic collision with the cup), so it won't make up for the loss in raising the weight as it rounded the pulley. Here is where I'm not convinced. Let's say the energy lost in the weights falling into their new position is K. The total energy is then, ρhAgD - 2Mgh + 2Mgh - K (?)
Genady Posted January 30, 2023 Posted January 30, 2023 I think I know. The cups will never get over the turning points on the very top and on the very bottom of the upper and the lower wheels. This is because regardless of how the cups are attached to the belt, it takes h longer way for the upper weight to reach the top of the upper wheel than it takes for the lower weight to reach the bottom of the lower wheel. See, for example, this: Thus, to get to the turning point the device needs at least Mgh extra energy. But, as @Lorentz Jr has derived above, this is equal to or more than the energy that all other cups can supply. So, the device will stop before reaching that configuration. QED 1
Saber Posted February 1, 2023 Author Posted February 1, 2023 I admit im dumber than that to understand it.......haha ........... i mean if i put time and effort....maybe i will but in the country i live and the situation i am now........i have to work ......10 hours a day........really i have not that much of mental energy to put it on that Ill save it and try to put some effort on it later......also for the post @studiot sent for th balloon buoyant from the book..............
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now