Genady Posted May 23, 2023 Posted May 23, 2023 A string is wound evenly around a circular rod exactly four times. What is the length of the string if the length of the rod is 12 cm, and its circumference is 4 cm?
mistermack Posted May 23, 2023 Posted May 23, 2023 (edited) Spoiler 20 cm ? Edited May 23, 2023 by mistermack 1
Genady Posted May 23, 2023 Author Posted May 23, 2023 5 minutes ago, mistermack said: Reveal hidden contents 20 cm ? Yes. +1
TheVat Posted May 23, 2023 Posted May 23, 2023 Spoiler The relation between a circle and a sine wave seems relevant here. The string winding (just take one of the four) must be seen in a Euclidean plane by rotating the tube some. The amplitude is 4/2π? And period is... ugh, I am rusty. It is not three, because of rotation of tube. (final calculation would be arc length for one cycle of sine wave, multiply by four.) Nope, I need to rethink this. Wait, easy way is use helix formula, L = sq rt(height squared + circumference squared. So...sq rt of 3 sq + 4 sq = 5. So answer is 20? Drat! He beats me to it by one minute! 😀 1
mistermack Posted May 23, 2023 Posted May 23, 2023 Spoiler My thinking was that if you call the rod a piece of paper rolled up four times, then unroll it and you have a right-angled triange. Then just use the square on the hypoteneus to work it out. 1
TheVat Posted May 23, 2023 Posted May 23, 2023 3 minutes ago, mistermack said: Hide contents My thinking was that if you call the rod a piece of paper rolled up four times, then unroll it and you have a right-angled triange. Then just use the square on the hypoteneus to work it out. Spoiler Yes that's how helix formula is derived. Well done. Using this spoiler box system on a small tablet is going to drive me insane. LOL 1
Genady Posted May 23, 2023 Author Posted May 23, 2023 15 minutes ago, mistermack said: Hide contents My thinking was that if you call the rod a piece of paper rolled up four times, then unroll it and you have a right-angled triange. Then just use the square on the hypoteneus to work it out. That's how I thought about it, too. Spoiler One turn, like in @TheVat's explanation, is a rod of length 3. Unroll it and get a classical right triangle, 3-4-5. Times 4.
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