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MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Department of Physics 8.01 Problem Solving Session 3: Momentum and Continuous Mass Transfer Solution ICW05D3-1 Group Problem 1: Rocket Sled Slowing Down A rocket sled can eject gas backwards or forwards at a speed u relative to the sled. The mass of the fuel in the sled is equal to dry mass of the sled, m0 . At t 0 the rocket sled has speed v0 and starts to eject fuel in the forward direction in order to slow down. You may ignore air resistance. You may treat u as a given constant in the following questions. a) Derive a relation between the differential of the speed of the rocket sled, dvr , and the differential of the mass of the rocket sled, dmr . b) Integrate the above relation to find the speed of the rocket sled as a function of mass, vr (mr ) , as the rocket sled slows down. c) What was the initial speed v0 of the rocket sled if the sled came to rest just as all the fuel was burned? Solution: Take as the system the rocket sled, fuel, and the small amount of fuel of mass m f that is ejected during the interval [t ,t t ] . Let the positive x -direction be to the right in the figures below. We first show the momentum diagram at time t : The smaller square represents the small amount of fuel of mass m f that is ejected during the interval [t ,t t ] . In the above figure mr (t) is the combined mass of the rocket sled, the dry mass of the rocket sled plus the mass of fuel inside the rocket sled at time t that does not leave the rocket sled during the interval. The x -component of the velocity of the rocket sled is denoted by vr (t) . In analyzing our momentum diagrams we shall drop the explicit reference to time dependence for the mass of the rocket and the x -component of the velocity of the rocket sled, denoting them respectively by mr and vr Returning to our momentum diagram we see that at time t , the x -component of the momentum of the system pxsys (t) is given by pxsys (t) (mr m f )vr (1) By the end of the interval the rocket has recoiled backward with x -component of the velocity vr vr , here vr 0 . (Note we did not put a minus sign in but let the differential be negative. As you will see later on the sign takes care of itself.) The fuel is ejected forwards relative to the rocket sled with speed u , hence with a speed vr vr u relative to the fixed reference frame depicted in the figures. After the interval has ended the momentum diagram of the system is shown below. At time t t , the x -component of the momentum of the system pxsys (t t) is given by pxsys (t t) = mr (vr vr ) m f (vr vr u) (2) and so the change in x -component of the momentum of the system during the interval [t ,t t ] is pxsys pxsys (t t) pxsys (t) mr (vr vr ) m f (vr vr u) (mr m f )vr . (3) mr vr m f vr m f u There are no external forces acting in the x -direction, therefore the momentum principle pxsys Fxext lim (4) t t0 becomes 0 lim mr vr m f vr m f u t t0 . (5) We note that lim m f vr t t0 0. (6) Then using the definition of the derivative, we find that the differential equation describing the motion of the system is given by dvr 0 mr dt d mf dt u (7) Because the fuel is being ejected at a positive rate and the mass of the rocket sled is the rate of decrease of the mass of the rocket sled is negative we have that dmr dt dm f (8) dt We can now substitute Eq. (8) into the Eq. (7) and find that 0 mr dvr dt d mr dt u. (9) We can solve this equation by the technique of separation of variables. First rewrite the equation as dv d mr mr r u. (10) dt dt Multiple each side by dt and divide by through by mr . Thus dvr d mr mr u. (11) b) Integrate the above relation to find the speed of the rocket sled as a function of mass, vr (mr ) , as the rocket sled speeds up. From the information given in the statement of the problem, the dry mass m0 of the rocket sled is equal to the initial mass of the fuel so the initial mass of the rocket is mr,0 2m0 . (12) We can integrate both sides of Eq. (11), (making sure that our choice of limits for the integrals are consistent), vr vr (mr ) vr v0 mr mr dvr u dmr . mr mr 2 m0 (13) Integration yields m vr (mr ) v0 u ln r 2m0 (14) The speed of the rocket sled vr (mr ) as a function of mass, is thus m vr (mr ) v0 u ln r . 2m0 (15) Note that mr 2m0 , so that ln(mr / 2m0 ) 0 and hence vr (mr ) v0 . The signs did in fact take care of themselves! c) What was the initial speed v0 of the rocket sled if the sled came to rest just as all the fuel was burned? The final mass of the rocket is then mr, f m0 . After substituting vr (mr , f ) 0 into Eq. (15) we can solve for the initial speed v0 of the rocket sled v0 u ln(2) . (0.16) ICW05D3-2 Group Problem 2: Car on Barge QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. A workman is unloading the last car (mass mc ) from a barge (mass mb ) tied to the pier by a short cable. He drives with a constant acceleration from a standing start and attains a speed v f in the time t f it takes to reach the end of the barge. a) Does this put tension in the cable or does it push the barge against the dock? b) Depending on your answer to a) determine an expression for either the tension in the cable T (t) or the magnitude of the horizontal force of the pier on the barge F(t) during the time t 0 to t t f . Express your answer in terms of some or all of the quantities mc , mb , v f and t f . Solution: a) Consider the car and the barge as the system. The momentum of the system is increasing toward the right. Thus there must be an external force on the system pointing right. That implies tension in the cable. b) We begin by noting that the car moves with constant acceleration, so ac v f / t f and by integration vc (t) (v f / t f )t using the fact that the car starts from rest, vc (0) 0 . There are several possible ways to approach this problem. r r First Approach: F dp / dt applied to system consisting of the car and the barge. r r We shall apply F dp / dt to this system that is under the influence of an external force, the tension in the rope: d T (t) (mbvb mc vc ) dt Thus dv T (t) mc c mc v f / t f . dt r r Second Approach: We choose the car as our system and apply F mca c to the car. Since the car is accelerating, it is experiencing a force by the barge on the car r r Fb,c mca c . Because the car and barge from an interaction pair , By Newton's Third Law, r r r the force on the barge due to the car is Fc,b Fb,c mca c mc ac î . But the barge, is stationary, so the horizontal forces must sum to zero. The barge experiences two forces: r r the force from the car Fc,b and the tension force of the rope on the barge Tr ,b (t) T (t) î . r r r Thus Tr ,b (t) Fc,b 0 implies that after taking the x -component mc ac T (t) 0 . So the tension in the rope is T (t) mc ac mc v f / t f in agreement with our result above. Third Approach: Motion of the Center of Mass: We can relate the acceleration of the center of mass to the external force, the tension, r Tr ,b (t) T (t) î . Let L be the length of the boat. Choose an origin at the left side of the boat. Treat the barge as a point-like object located a distance L / 2 from the origin. Then the x -component of the center of mass is X cm (t) mc xc mb xb mc mb mc xc (L / 2)xb mc mb . Differentiating twice gives the x -component of the acceleration of the center of mass: Acm (t) mc ac mb ab mc mb mc ac mc mb (mc v f / t f ) mc mb . r r The tension in the rope is then found by using Fext msystem A cm , where msystem mc mb r r and Fext Tr ,b (t) T (t) î . Thus T (t) (mc mb ) Acm (t) (mc mb ) (mc v f / t f ) mc mb mc v f / t f . Remark: The x -component of momentum is not constant due to the presence of an external force. Therefore mc vc (t) mbvb (t) . It is incorrect to draw the following conclusions that vb (t) mc vc (t) / mb hence ab (t) mc ac (t) / mb (mc / mb )(v f / t f ) , and finally T (t) mb ab (t) mc v f / t f .Two things to note. First, the barge is stationary so ab (t) 0 . Second, this incorrect result for the tension differs only by a minus sign from the correct result but it is a very important minus sign because the direction of the tension force on the barge must be in the positive x -direction. ICW05D3-3 Group Problem 3: Extra Table Problem (if there is time): Acrobat and Clown An acrobat of mass m A jumps upwards off a trampoline with an initial y-component of the velocity v y,0 v0 . At a height h0 , the acrobat grabs a clown of mass m B . Assume that the time the acrobat takes to grab the clown is negligibly small. How high do the acrobat and clown rise? How high would the acrobat go if the acrobat and the clown have the same mass? Solution: Choose the acrobat and the clown as the system. The first important observation to make is that there is a collision between the acrobat and the clown. This collision is completely inelastic in that the two bodies collide and “stick’ together after the collision. The details of the collision are determined by the internal forces in the system. Since this is a one- dimensional motion, let’s choose an origin at the trampoline and the positive y-axis upwards. There are two important states to identify in this problem. State 1: Immediately before the collision. Acrobat A just arrives at platform located at y1, A y2, B h0 with velocity v1, A v1, Aˆj , immediately before grabbing Clown B. Denote this time by t1 . The collision lasts a time tcol . During this time interval, acrobat A grabs Clown B. State 2: Immediately after the collision. At the end of the interval, the two acrobats rise together with velocity v 2 v2 ˆj . Denote the time at the end of this interval by t2 t1 tcol . The key assumption is that the collision time is instantaneous tcol 0 . The impulse delivered by the external gravitational force is zero during the collision because the collision was assumed to be instantaneous. Therefore during the collision, the total momentum of the system is constant. If the collision lasts a significant length of time, there would be some slowing down of the acrobat A during the collision. then we need to calculate this effect. However by assuming the collision is instantaneous, we can ignore this slowing down, and therefore the change in the system momentum is zero. From one-dimensional kinematics, the y-component of the velocity of the acrobat A at the t1 is given by (v1, A ) y (v02 2gh0 )1/ 2 . (17) State 1 to State 2: Momentum in state 1 (immediately before collision) is only due to acrobat A p1, A mA (v1, A ) y j mA (v02 2 gh0 )1/ 2 j . (18) The momentum in state 2 (immediately after the collision) is p2 (mA mB )v2, y j . (19) mA (v02 2 gh0 )1/ 2 j (mA mB )v2, y j . (20) Since momentum is unchanged, The y-component of the velocity of the acrobat A at the t 2 is given by . v2, y mA mA mB (v02 2gh0 )1/ 2 (21) Again from one-dimensional kinematics, the final height of the acrobat and the clown is given by hf 1 (v2, y )2 h0 . 2g (22) We can use our above result for the y-component of the velocity immediately after the collision to find the final height in terms of the initial y-component of the velocity of acrobat A and the initial height of clown B, 2 hf mA 1 (v02 2gh0 ) h0 . 2 2g (mA mB ) (23) When the mass of the acrobat is equal to the mass of the clown mA mB , the mass ratio becomes mA2 (mA mB )2 1 and so the height becomes 4 2 mA2 1 1 2 1 v0 2 hf (v 2gh0 ) h0 (v 2gh0 ) h0 ( 3h0 ) . (24) 2g (mA mB )2 0 8g 0 4 2g