rakuenso Posted October 4, 2005 Posted October 4, 2005 Here's the problem: A 500g steel block rotates on a steel table while attached to a 1.2m long hollow tube. Compressed air fed through the tube and ejected from a nozzle on the back of the block exerts a thrust force of 4.0 N perpendicular to the tube. The maximum tension the tube can withstand without breaking is 50N. If the block starts from rest, how man revolutions does it make before the tube breaks. Now back of my text book tells me its 3.75 revolutions But here's my solution: I approached to this problem via the rtz-axis, (Fnet)r = Tension of hollow tube = mass*w^2*radius (w, for angular velocity (Fnet)t = Force of thrust = mass*(acceleration in the t direction) So knowing all this, First I solved for w (angular velocity): 50 N=0.5kg(w^2)(1.2) w(final)=9.129 rad/sec Then I solved for acceleration in the t direction: 4N=0.5kg(At) At=8m/s^2 Finally I used the formulas for non-uniform circular motion: theta(final)=theta(initial) + w(initial)(time) + (acceleration t)/(2r) * (time^2) and w(final) = w(initial) + (acceleration t)/(radius) * (time) Ok I plug everything into the second equation: 9.129 = 0 (because object starts at rest) + 8/(1.2) * time time = 1.369 Then I plug it back into the first equation theta(final)= 0 (once again because objects starts at rest) + 0 + 8/(2.4) (1.369^2) = ~6.25 rad 6.25 rad = ~.995 revolutions...
swansont Posted October 4, 2005 Posted October 4, 2005 I agree with your analysis. It makes just less than 1 revolution.
rakuenso Posted October 5, 2005 Author Posted October 5, 2005 i found out my error, I neglected kinetic friction... (although i'm not sure why its kinetic and not static and kinetic since the object starts from rest)
swansont Posted October 5, 2005 Posted October 5, 2005 i found out my error, I neglected kinetic friction... (although i'm not sure why its kinetic and not static and kinetic since the object starts from rest) Static only applies at the very start of the problem - once it's moving, you need only consider kinetic friction. As long as the static friction is less than 4.0 N, you can ignore it.
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