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Phy2048 Spring 2008 Review Exam 2 Q20: Two disks are mounted on low-friction bearings on a common shaft. The first disc has rotational inertia I and is spinning with angular velocity ω. The second disc has rotational inertia 2I and is spinning in the same direction as the first disc with angular velocity 2ω as shown. The two disks are slowly forced toward each other along the shaft until they couple and have a final common angular velocity of: a b We don’t know the details of how the disks get stuck together. So all we know is initial and final conditions. This sounds like a job for .... conservation of angular momentum Initially: 1) Li,tot = La + Lb La = +Iiωi î, Lb = +(2Ii) (2ωi) î Li,tot = +5 Iiωi î y z x 2) Lf,tot = Li,tot = +5 Iiωi î 3) Lf,tot = Ifωf î If = Ia + Ib = Ii + 2Ii = 3Ii (3 Ii)ωf î = +5 Iiωi î ωf î = +5/3 ωi Q19: A 2.0 kg block travels around a 0.50 m radius circle with an angular velocity of 12 rad/s. The magnitude of its angular momentum about the center of the circle is: v Angular momentum: L⃗ = ⃗ rx⃗ p = r (mv) sinθ y 1) L = r (mv) sin(90°) = (0.5 m)(2 kg· v) (1) r z x 2) v = ωr = (12 rad/s)(0.5 m) = 6 m/s 3) L = (0.5 m)(2 kg· 6 m/s) (1) = 6 kg m2/s Q18: A sphere and cylinder of equal mass and radius are simultaneously released from the same height, from rest, on the same inclined plane, rolling down the incline without slipping. On an adjacent incline of the same angle a cube of the same mass is simultaneously released from rest, from the same height, to slide without friction down the incline. Then: Sphere or Cylinder: ω y x 1) Fx,net = +mg sinθ - fs = maCM 2) τCM,net = - Rfs = ICM α 3) aCM = -αR FN fs aCM Fg θ y 4) 5) 6) 7) -Rfs = ICM (-aCM/R) fs = ICM aCM/R2 mg sinθ - ICM aCM/R2 = maCM aCM = + g sinθ / (1 + ICM/MR2) 8) ICM,Sphere = 2/5 MR2, ICM,Cylinder = 1/2 MR2 9) aCM,Sphere = +g sinθ / (1 + (2/5 MR2)/MR2) = +g sinθ / (1 + 2/5) = -5/7g sinθ FN x aCM Fg 10)aCM, Cylinder = +g sinθ / (1 + (1/2 MR2)/MR2) = +g sinθ / (1 + 1/2) = -2/3 g sinθ Block: 1) Fx,net = +mg sinθ - 0 = maCM.Block 2) aCM,Block = +g sinθ θ 1) aCM,Block > aCM,Sphere > aCM,Cylinder Q17: A thin-walled hollow tube rolls without sliding along the floor. The ratio of its translational kinetic energy to its rotational kinetic energy (about an axis through its center of mass) is: ω For rolling without slipping we have: vCM = ωr vCM Translational kinetic energy: 1) KTr = ½ M vCM2 2) KRot = ½ IHoop ω2 IHoop = M r2 ω = vCM/r KRot = ½ (Mr2) (vCM/r)2 = ½ M vCM2 3) KTr / KRot = 1.0 Note: we did not need to know the mass (M), the radius (r), or even the linear or angular velocity of the hoop to solve this problem Q16: A rod is pivoted about its center. A 5N force is applied 4 m from the pivot and another 5N force is applied 2 m from the pivot, as shown. The magnitude of the total torque about the pivot (in N· m) is: b a y z x 1) τtot = τa + τb 2) τa = ra x Fa = + Fa ra sin(30°) k̂ = (5N)(4m)(0.5) k̂ 3) τb = rb x Fb = + Fb rb sin(30°) k̂ = +(5N)(2m) (0.5) k̂ 4) τtot = (10 + 5) k̂ N· m = 15 k̂ N· m Q15: The rotational inertia of a solid uniform sphere about a diameter is (2/5)MR2, where M is its mass and R is its radius. If the sphere is pivoted about an axis that is tangent to its surface, its rotational inertia is: We know the ICenter of Mass and we want to fins the rotational inertia around another parallel axis. This sounds like a job for .... “The parallel axis theorem” ICenter = 2/5 MR2 Initially: 1) Inew = ICM + Mh2 h=R 2) Inew = (2/5)MR2 + MR2 = 7/5 MR2 IRim = ? Q13: The angular speed of the minute hand of a watch is: ω = Δθ/Δt = 1 rotation / 1 hr = 2π rad / 3600 s = π/1800 rad / s Q14: A flywheel is initially rotating at 20 rad/s and has a constant angular acceleration. After 9.0 s it has rotated through 450 rad. Its angular acceleration is: θf = θi + ωit + ½ αt2 α = 2[(θf - θi) - ωit] / t2 α = 2[(450 rad) - (20 rad/s)(9 s)] / (9s)2 = 6.67 rad/s2 Q11: A 0.2 kg rubber ball is dropped from the window of a building. It strikes the sidewalk below at 30 m/s and rebounds up at 20 m/s. The magnitude of the impulse due to the collision with the sidewalk is: Impulse: J = Δp = pf - pi = mvf - mvi = (0.2 kg)[20 m/s ĵ - (-30 m/s ĵ)] = (0.2 kg)[50 m/s ĵ] = 10 ĵ kg· m/s ≡ 10 ĵ N· s Q10: Two 4.0-kg blocks are tied together with a compressed spring between them. They are thrown from the ground with an initial velocity of 35 m/s, 45° above the horizontal. At the highest point of the trajectory they become untied and spring apart. About how far below the highest point is the center of mass of the twoblock system 2.0 s later, before either fragment has hit the ground? The trajectory of the center of mass follows the parabola of a free falling object. We do not know the spring constant and the direction of how the blocks are tied together or the details of how they become untied. It does not matter. y 1) y(t) = y0 + v0yt - ½gt2 vy(t) = v0y - gt x Let’s start the problem at the maximum of the trajectory: 2) v0y = 0 3) y(t) = ymax + v0yt - ½gt2 θ y(2s) = - ½g(2s)2 = 19.6 m y(t-tmax) = - ½gt2 Q10: Two 4.0-kg blocks are tied together with a compressed spring between them. They are thrown from the ground with an initial velocity of 35 m/s, 45° above the horizontal. At the highest point of the trajectory they become untied and spring apart. About how far below the highest point is the center of mass of the twoblock system 2.0 s later, before either fragment has hit the ground? The trajectory of the center of mass follows the parabola of a free falling object. .... The long solution 1) y(t) = y0 + v0yt - ½gt2 vy(t) = v0y - gt 2) tmax = v0y/g y x θ 3) y(tmax+2s) = v0y(v0y/g+2s) - ½g (v0y/g+2s) 2 = (v0sinθ)2/g + (v0sinθ)(2s) - ½g(v0sinθ/g + 2s)2 = (v0sinθ)2/g + (v0sinθ)(2s) - ½g[(v0sinθ/g)2 + (2s)2 + 2(v0sinθ/g)(2s)] = (v0sinθ)2/g + (v0sinθ)(2s) - ½(v0sinθ)2/g - ½g(2s)2 - (v0sinθ)(2s) = ½(v0sinθ)2/g - ½g(2s)2 = ½[(v0sinθ)2/g - g(2s)2] = 11.6m 5) y(tmax) = v0y(v0y/g) - ½g (v0y/g) 2 = (v0sinθ)2/g - ½g(v0sinθ/g)2 = ½ (v0sinθ)2/g = 31.2 m 6) y(tmax) - y(tmax +2s) = 31.2 - 11.6 m = 19.6m Q12: A 75kg man is riding in a 30kg cart at 2.0 m/s. He jumps off in such a way as to land on the ground with no horizontal velocity. The resulting change in speed of the cart is: Vi = 2 m/s Vf,Man = 0 m/s Initially y z x Vf,Cart = ? m/s Finally We don’t know the details of how the man jump and the forces he exerts on the cart. So all we know is initial and final conditions. This sounds like a job for .... conservation of linear momentum Initially: 1) Pi,tot = Mtot vi = (Mman + Mcart) vi 2) Pf,tot = Mman vf,man + Mcart vf,cart = Mman 0 + Mcart vf,cart = Mcart vf,cart 3) Pf,tot = Pi,tot Mcart vf,cart = (Mman + Mcart) vi vf,cart = 7 m/s. Δv = vf - vi = 5 m/s vf,cart = vi(Mman + Mcart)/Mcart Q9: Block A, with a mass of 4 kg, is moving with a speed of 2.0 m/s while block B, with a mass of 8 kg, is moving in the opposite direction with a speed of 3 m/s. The center of mass of the two block-system is moving with the velocity of: PCM = PA + PB = mAvA + mBvB = (4kg)(2m/s) + (8kg)(-3m/s) = -16 kg· m/s PCM = (mA+mB)vCM = (-16 kg· m/s) vCM = (-16 kg· m/s)/(mA+mB) = -1.33 m/s 1.33 m/s in the same direction as B Q8: A 25g ball is released from rest 80m above the surface of the Earth. During the fall the total thermal energy of the ball and air increases by 15J. Just before it hits the surface its speed is: Wtot = ΔK = Kf - Ki = Kf - 0 = ½mvf2 Wtot = Wgrav + Wdrag = +Fg· d - 15J = (0.025kg· 9.81m/s2)(80m) - 15J = 4.62J vf = √[2(4.62 J)/0.025kg] = 19.2 m/s Q7: The potential energy of a body of mass m is given by U = −mgx + ½kx2. The corresponding force is: F = -dU/dx = -d(-mgx + ½kx2)/dx = -[-mg + kx] = mg - kx Q5: A 0.20 kg particle moves along the x axis under the influence of a conservative force. The potential energy is given by U(x) = (8.0 J/m2)x2 + (2.0 J/m4)x4, where x is the coordinate of the particle (in meters). If the particle has a speed of 5.0 m/s when it is at x = 1.0 m, its speed when it is at the origin is: K1 + U1 = K2 + U2 ½mv12 + U(x1 = 1m) = ½mv22 + U(x2 = 0) ½mv12 + (8.0 J/m2)(1m)2 + (2.0 J/m4)(1m)4 = ½mv22 + (8.0 J/m2)(0m)2 + (2.0 J/m4)(0m)4 ½mv12 + (8.0 J) + (2.0 J) = ½mv22 + 0 J ½mv22 = ½mv12 + 10 J ½mv22 = ½(0.2 kg)(5 m/s)2 + 10 J = 12.5 J v2 = 11.2 m/s Q4: At time t = 0 a 2kg particle has a velocity in m/s of (4 m/s) î −(3 m/s) ĵ. At t = 3 s its velocity is (2 m/s) î + (3 m/s) ĵ. During this time the work done on it was: Wtot = ΔK = Kf - Ki = ½Mvf2 - ½Mvi2 = ½M[(2 m/s)2 + (3 m/s)2] - ½M[(4 m/s)2 + (3 m/s)2] = ½M[13 (m/s)2] - ½m[25 (m/s)2] = ½M[-12 (m/s)2] = -½(2 kg)[12 (m/s)2] = - 12 J Q3: A 0.50-kg object moves in a horizontal circular track with a radius of 2.5 m. An external force of 3.0 N, always tangent to the track, causes the object to speed up as it goes around. The work done by the external force as the mass makes one revolution is: W = F· x = F x sinθ = F x sin(90°) = (3N)(2π 2.5m)(1) = 47 J Q2: An object is constrained by a cord to move in a circular path of radius 0.5m on a horizontal frictionless surface. The cord will break if its tension exceeds 16N. The maximum kinetic energy of the object can have is: F = T = mv2/r K = ½mv2 ½mv2 = ½T r = ½(16 N)(0.5 m) = 4J Q1: A 8000-N car is traveling at 12 m/s along a horizontal road when the brakes are applied. The car skids to a stop in 4.0s. How much kinetic energy does the car lose in this time? ΔK = Kf - Ki Ki = ½mvi2, m = 8000N / g = Kf = 0 ΔK = 0 - ½(8000N / 9.81 m/s2)(12 m/s)2 = 58715 J = 5.9x104 J