Assignment 35

course PHY 201

on a side note: exam week is approaching and I was wondering about a study guide. Project Excel might be able to hold any handouts you might give.

Your work has been received. Please scroll through the document to see any inserted notes (inserted at the appropriate place in the document, in boldface) and a note at the end. The note at the end of the file will confirm that the file has been reviewed; be sure to read that note. If there is no note at the end, notify the instructor through the Submit Work form, and include the date of the posting to your access page.

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17:04:34 `q001. Note that this assignment contains 5 questions. At its maximum velocity, a simple harmonic oscillator matches the speed of the point moving around its reference circle. What is the maximum velocity of a pendulum 20 cm long whose amplitude of oscillation is 20 cm? Note that the radius of the reference circle is equal to the amplitude of oscillation.

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RESPONSE --> omega = sqrt(980/20) omega = 7cm/s

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17:16:10 We need to find the velocity of the point on the reference circle that models this motion. The reference circle will have a radius that matches the amplitude of oscillation, in this case 20 cm. The period of the oscillation is T = 2 `pi `sqrt( L / g ) = 2 `pi `sqrt( 20 cm / (980 cm/s^2) ) = .9 sec, approx.. Thus the point completes a revolution around the reference circle once every .9 sec. The circumference of the reference circle is 2 `pi r = 2 `pi * 20 cm = 126 cm, approx., so the point moves at an average speed of 126 cm / .9 sec = 140 cm/s. Thus the maximum velocity of the pendulum must be 140 cm/s.

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RESPONSE --> okay, so 7rad/s is the frequency for the pendilum, but for the circle point to match that, it must be 140cm/s I'm not entirely sure I made an accurate assumption.

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17:20:55 `q002. If the 10 kg mass suspended from the 3000 N/m spring undergoes SHM with amplitude 3 cm, what is its maximum velocity?

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RESPONSE --> sqrt(3000 N/m / 10kg) 17.3rad/s 2pi rad / 17.3rad/s = .36s 2 pi (3cm) / .36s = 52.4cm/s

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17:21:39 We previously found the angular frequency and then the period of this system, obtaining period of oscillation T = .36 second. The reference circle will have radius 3 cm, so its circumference is 2 `pi * 3 cm = 19 cm, approx.. Traveling 19 cm in .36 sec the speed of the point on the reference circle is approximately 19 cm / (.36 sec) = 55 cm/s. This is the maximum velocity of the oscillator.

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RESPONSE --> check

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17:24:17 `q003. What is the KE of the oscillator at this speed?

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RESPONSE --> .5 10kg (52cm/s)^2 = 13520J

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17:25:47 The KE is .5 m v^2 = .5 * 10 kg * (.55 m/s)^2 = 1.5 Joules, approx.. Note that this is the maximum KE of the oscillator.

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RESPONSE --> okay, I should have gotten 1.4J, Joules can only come from meters.

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17:32:25 `q004. How much work is required to displace the mass 3 cm from its equilibrium position?

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RESPONSE --> Work = (3000 * .03^2)/2 = 1.35N m

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17:36:17 The mass rests at its equilibrium position so at that position there is no displacing force, since equilibrium is the position taken in the absence of displacing forces. As it is pulled from its equilibrium position more and more force is required, until at the 3 cm position the force is F = k x = 3000 N / m * .03 m = 90 N. (Note that F here is not the force exerted by the spring, but the force exerted against the spring to stretch it, so we use kx instead of -kx). Thus the displacing force increases from 0 at equilibrium to 90 N at 3 cm from equilibrium, and the average force exerted over the 3 cm displacement is (0 N + 90 N ) / 2 = 45 N. The work done by this force is `dW = F `dx = 45 N * .03 m = 1.5 Joules.

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RESPONSE --> check

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17:38:19 `q005. How does the work required to displace the mass 3 cm from its equilibrium position compare to the maximum KE of the oscillator, which occurs at its equilibrium position? How does this result illustrate the conservation of energy?

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RESPONSE --> The values seem to be the same, this would indicate that Change in Work is equal to KE.

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17:40:18 Both results were 1.5 Joules. The work required to displace the oscillator to its extreme position is equal to the maximum kinetic energy of the oscillator, which occurs at the equilibrium position. So 1.5 Joules of work must be done against the restoring force to move the oscillator from its equilibrium position to its extreme position. When released, the oscillator returns to its equilibrium position with that 1.5 Joules of energy in the form of kinetic energy. Thus the work done against the restoring force is present at the extreme position in the form of potential energy, which is regained as the mass returns to its equilibrium position. This kinetic energy will then be progressively lost as the oscillator moves to its extreme position on the other side of equilibrium, at which point the system will again have 1.5 Joules of potential energy, and the cycle will continue. At every point between equilibrium and extreme position the total of the KE and the PE will in fact be 1.5 Joules, because whatever is lost by one form of energy is gained by the other.

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RESPONSE --> check

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This looks good. Let me know if you have questions.