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#1 2007-11-28 03:05:16

vibgyor
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Registered: 2007-11-28
Posts: 10

a tricky problem involving physics...

http://in.answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AhV.MITwGtI3jO5OYJXKF1GQHQx.;_ylv=3?qid=20071125231521AAgrxmJ   

pls  can  you  check  the  above link  .  and  i  need   ur  answers    for  the  problem.  thanx .

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#2 2007-11-28 03:14:06

NullRoot
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Registered: 2007-11-19
Posts: 162

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

Sorry, Vibgyor, but I don't get what you're trying to describe or how you're arriving at your velocities? Can you try and explain it again and include some workings?


Trillian: Five to one against and falling. Four to one against and falling… Three to one, two, one. Probability factor of one to one. We have normality. I repeat, we have normality. Anything you still can’t cope with is therefore your own problem.

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#3 2007-11-28 05:12:27

vibgyor
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Registered: 2007-11-28
Posts: 10

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

sorry  about that. i  ahd  go  away for a while.  im  copy pasting  a  part  it.

take some 1000 metres of   chain or lace to a table which is forty metres high . and now throw down one end of lace or chain. remember the lace is neatly arranged and not etangled . now that starts running down and hits the ground and begins to pull down the rest of the chain which is at a height of 40 metres on top the table. it ill take some time for the whole length(1000m) to run down. (the chain  is  not  stretched . but  its    kept  like  rolled  up  fire hose).  its  going  to take more than 30 secs for  the  entire  length  of the  chain to  hit  the  ground.

nowthe  chain  cant keep  on  accelerating  rgt ..?  what  will  be  the  terminal  velocity..?

air  resistance and friction taken as  zero. take g as 10m/s^2 .   hope  you get what im tryin to describe . thanx.

Last edited by vibgyor (2007-11-28 08:40:52)

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#4 2007-11-28 11:19:07

NullRoot
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Registered: 2007-11-19
Posts: 162

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

The short answer is No.

It's easier if you imagine the chain rather than the rope. I'm assuming you basically want to ignore friction of any sort (like the chain against the table) not just air resistance?
Each link will have an initial velocity of 0 as it goes over the edge of the table. It doesn't matter that ones have come before, because the entire length of chain that is in the process of falling is accelerating at the same rate. The acceleration cannot increase because gravity is constant.
So the link that's about to hit the floor is going faster than the one that's just gone over the edge table, but their velocity is changing at the same rate: ~9.8m/s². Once it hits the floor, it will stop accelerating and it's velocity will return to 0. As will each link in the chain after that.

So the rate at which another link is fed into the freefall will increase until the first link hits the floor; then it will equalise because the average velocity of the length of chain that is in freefall will remain constant.

Hope that makes sense?


Trillian: Five to one against and falling. Four to one against and falling… Three to one, two, one. Probability factor of one to one. We have normality. I repeat, we have normality. Anything you still can’t cope with is therefore your own problem.

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#5 2007-11-28 19:24:52

vibgyor
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Registered: 2007-11-28
Posts: 10

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

thanx nullroot.

let me pose this question in another way.  lets  reduce  this between  two  points A and  point B

point A is onthe surface of the ground   and  point  B  is  directly above  it . distance  AB  lets  take  as  10 metres.  now , imagine at  point  B,   theres  an   unending  supply of  chain  or lace which  is  neatly  rolled up  like  a  firehose(not  entangled )
let  us  name every metre of  chain or  lace  as  L1  ,L2,L3,L4.....and so   on   till  1000 th  metre
is named as L1000.      now   pull   down  L1 so  that  it  touches  point A  on  the  floor. from  now on   gravity  takes  over and  the  chain  or  lace starts   to  flow down like waterfalls  from  pointB. 

now  how long   will  it  take  for   first 200  metres  of  chain or  lace  to  hit   the  ground (pointA)..?   take  acc  due  to  gravity  as 10 m/s^2.    i  assume  the chain  has   to flow  down at  a  constant velocity  after a few  seconds..

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#6 2007-11-28 21:34:30

NullRoot
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Registered: 2007-11-19
Posts: 162

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

Let's assume you don't pull down the first 10 meters (effectively connecting A to B with a length of chain).
So we start off the process and link 1 falls. Just as it touches the floor we freeze time so we can see what's going on and work out some equations.

At point A there is a link touching the ground that has fallen there from a height of 10 meters, beginning from rest. At point B there is now another link (the first link of the next 10 meters of chain) which is at rest, waiting to fall.

For the end of the chain (that has fallen to A) to start from rest and reach the floor 10 meters away, the time taken is determined by:
displacement = initial velocity * time + 0.5 * acceleration * time²
So:
10m = 0m/s * t + 0.5 * 10m/s² * t²
10 = 0 + 5 * t²
2 = t²
t = 1.414s (to 3 decimal places)

EDIT: Amended a mathematical mistake; subtracted 5 instead of dividing

So you now know that it takes 1.414 seconds for 10 meters of chain to fall from A to B. It will also take 1.414 seconds for the link at point B to fall to point A.

After the first 1.414 seconds, though, only the first link has hit the floor; there isn't any chain on the ground. For the first 10 meters of chain to be on the floor, the link at point B must hit the floor, right? Now because it also starts from rest, the time it takes to hit the floor is also 1.414 seconds.

For all 200 meters to be on the floor at point A, it will take 1.414s (for the first link to fall) and then 1.414s for each length of 10 meters of chain. So I make it 1.414 + 1.414*20, which is about 24 seconds.

Last edited by NullRoot (2007-11-29 04:02:12)


Trillian: Five to one against and falling. Four to one against and falling… Three to one, two, one. Probability factor of one to one. We have normality. I repeat, we have normality. Anything you still can’t cope with is therefore your own problem.

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#7 2007-11-28 22:20:40

vibgyor
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Registered: 2007-11-28
Posts: 10

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

t = 2.2 s  no  check.    10  =  5t^2;  t=  1.414.   

here  links  at B  are  suddenly  jerked up  from  rest  to   a  certain  velocity  at  point B  and  should  continue  to    travel  down  with that  constant velocity .  i  wanna  know  what  that  velocity  is.  besides  i  think  u  cant  use  that  simple  s= ut + .5 at^2 eqn.

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#8 2007-11-28 22:39:55

NullRoot
Member
Registered: 2007-11-19
Posts: 162

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

Yes, sorry, it's √2 seconds. Don't know why I subtracted the 5 instead of dividing. I'll go back and edit that to avoid future confusion.

They begin accelerating at 10m/s² towards the ground from their rest state and the acceleration is constant. They will not have a constant velocity because they are accelerating due to gravity. Once it has been pulled into the effects of gravity, the links below it cannot put an effect on it because it is being pulled down just as fast as they are: 10m/s²

I think s=ut+0.5at² is perfectly acceptable for this scenario.


Trillian: Five to one against and falling. Four to one against and falling… Three to one, two, one. Probability factor of one to one. We have normality. I repeat, we have normality. Anything you still can’t cope with is therefore your own problem.

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#9 2007-11-28 23:40:55

vibgyor
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Registered: 2007-11-28
Posts: 10

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

man  i   really appreciate  the  effort  you  have put  into your replies.  but.  no  you  cant  use  that  equation  here.     i   woud   greatly  appreciate  the  opinion of   janefairfax   in  this  problem  coz she  has  already  solved some  mechanics problems.

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#10 2007-11-28 23:45:49

NullRoot
Member
Registered: 2007-11-19
Posts: 162

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

Any particular reason you believe the equation is irrelevant?


Trillian: Five to one against and falling. Four to one against and falling… Three to one, two, one. Probability factor of one to one. We have normality. I repeat, we have normality. Anything you still can’t cope with is therefore your own problem.

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#11 2007-11-29 02:51:51

vibgyor
Member
Registered: 2007-11-28
Posts: 10

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

becoz after a  few sconds,  velocity of links  at  point A is  same as velocity  at  point  B.  an   links  get  jerked  up   instantly  at  point b  when  they  start  to  descend.  u  can  chec  that  with  a  long lace .  or   check  the  link  i  posted   initially.    THE  PONT  OF  POSTING THIS  WHOLE  THING  IS  THAT  THIS  PROBLEM  SEEMS TO  VIOLATES  LAW  OF  CONSERVATION OF  ENERGY.

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#12 2007-11-29 04:22:58

NullRoot
Member
Registered: 2007-11-19
Posts: 162

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

Let me try a visual then to see if maybe I'm intepreting something wrong? Anyone's free to point out where I might be incorrect because now I'm worried that I've lost touch with Applied Maths.

B
56789
4
3
2
1
---------A

So the numbers here represent the individual links in the chain and the order in which they will hit the floor. A is the floor and B is the part where the links crest the edge. 

A) The acceleration exerted on links 1 to 5 is 10m/s² in the direction of A. It's gravitational acceleration, so it's a constant.
B) Links 1 to 5 have a positive vertical velocity in the direction of A, albeit they each have a different velocity.
C) Links 6 to 9 have a positive horizontal velocity in the direction of link 5, because they are being pulled along by the fall of the links before.
D.1) The exact moment link 6 is pulled over the edge of the table, it has 0 vertical velocity. The table will prevent it from gaining a vertical velocity until that point.
D.2) The exact moment link 6 is pulled over the edge of the table, it will experience the same gravitational acceleration (10m/s²) in the direction of A as all other links in the chain. (In order for it to have a greater acceleration, there must be something with acceleration >10m/s² acting on it, right?)

E) The velocity of an object is calculated as: initial velocity plus acceleration times the amount of time the object has experienced that acceleration, ie (V=U+AT).

So if the link that crests the table has had a total vertical acceleration in the direction of A of 0m/s² until that point, then how can it's velocity be that of the link at the bottom which has been accelerating at 10m/s² for an amount of time greater than 0s?


Trillian: Five to one against and falling. Four to one against and falling… Three to one, two, one. Probability factor of one to one. We have normality. I repeat, we have normality. Anything you still can’t cope with is therefore your own problem.

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#13 2007-11-29 05:39:48

vibgyor
Member
Registered: 2007-11-28
Posts: 10

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

nullroot ,   u  should  try  it  with  a  short  piece  of  chain(may  be  three metres)  from a  small height  .4  metres or  so...     when  link  hits  point A  the  connecting  links  upto  point B will  have  the  same  vel   as that   of  the  link hitting point A.

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#14 2007-11-29 05:53:04

luca-deltodesco
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Registered: 2006-05-05
Posts: 1,470

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

im failing to see where conservation of energy is broken?


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The End Of All Things To Come.

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#15 2007-11-29 06:16:23

vibgyor
Member
Registered: 2007-11-28
Posts: 10

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

hi luca deltodesco

when  u   take  the  entire lenght of  the chain to a height of  40 metres   and  drop  it  as   whole .  it  will  hit  the  ground at  28.28 m/s(g= 10 units) .  here p.e = k.e.  but    in  the  described(see posts) method  will  the  individual  links hitting the  point A   reach  28.28 m/s...?   hope  you read  my  2nd and  third posts and  get  the   clear  and  right  picture.

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#16 2007-11-29 06:36:11

luca-deltodesco
Member
Registered: 2006-05-05
Posts: 1,470

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

if you have a chain parallel to ground at 40m, it will indeed hit ground at 28 (g = 9.81).

assuming the chain is 10 links long, with each link being 0.1m, and with mass 0.1kg. then the total gpe of above at 40m horizontal will be 40*10*0.1*9.81 = 392J (3sf), and kinetic energy 0.5*10*0.1*28² = 392J (3sf) energy conserved.

if you then have the chain perpendicular to ground, with centre of bottom link (treating links as particles so it will fall 40m) at 40m from ground.

then the total gpe at t = 0, is

= 10*0.1*9.81*40 + 45*0.1*9.81*0.1 = 437J(3sf)

the velocity of link i (starting at i = 0) when it hits the ground will be √(2*9.81*(40+0.1i)), so the kinetic energy when it hits ground is:

0.5*0.1*2*9.81*(40+0.1i) = 0.1*9.81*(40+0.1i), this has to be summed from i = 0 to i = 9... oh wait, without going any further you can see this is the same sum as was done for gpe. so they are equal, energy is conserved.

at anyone point in time, while all of them are moving, they will have the same velocity since they all start at 0 and accelerate at same rate. however the ones lower down reach the ground first and so the ones higher up reach the ground with a larger velocity -> the difference in Ke of the ones above to the ones below is the same as the difference in initial gpe of the ones above to the ones below

i did this with a chain of 10 links with links 0.1m long, but the exact same result is reached if you have a string of near infinite number of particles over a finite space

Last edited by luca-deltodesco (2007-11-29 06:45:49)


The Beginning Of All Things To End.
The End Of All Things To Come.

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#17 2007-11-29 06:51:33

NullRoot
Member
Registered: 2007-11-19
Posts: 162

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

Right. It was the second half of B where I was confused.

The chain in my diagram from link 1 to 5 will be going some velocity. The process of pulling link 6 over the edge of the table means that the downward velocity of everything attached to it momentarily becomes 0. It then accelerates back up to some speed until the point at which it needs to change the direction of motion on link 7 and so on.

This might be the part where you're getting confused. Link 6 won't "shoot up" to the velocity of 2 to 5, 2 to 5 will slow down to the velocity of 6. At that point, the whole lot speeds up again.
The thing is, it's only a moment in time in which the velocity is 0 so you won't notice it, especially on something like a string.

So what you have is a part of the downward acceleration dedicated to changing a horizontal velocity to a vertical one.

Last edited by NullRoot (2007-11-29 06:53:15)


Trillian: Five to one against and falling. Four to one against and falling… Three to one, two, one. Probability factor of one to one. We have normality. I repeat, we have normality. Anything you still can’t cope with is therefore your own problem.

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#18 2007-11-29 21:15:40

vibgyor
Member
Registered: 2007-11-28
Posts: 10

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

so what  do  you think  the  velocity  of  the first  link  will  when   hitting  ground...?  when  the  lenght of  chain  is taken as 40 metres   the  first  link  should hit  the  ground  at 20 m/s...

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#19 2007-12-01 22:06:30

vibgyor
Member
Registered: 2007-11-28
Posts: 10

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

in this case when height is taken as 40 metres and chain length 40 m , the first link should hit the floor with velocity 20m/s.

but when the chain is much longer every link has to hit the floor with a velocity of 28.28 m/s. the force of gravity acting on 40 metres of chain that is vertically running between the floor and the plane as to be balanced at some point and at this point there will be no further acceleration.rgt.? now gravity acting on (g =10m/^2) 40 metres of chain balances out when 28.2 metres chain hit the floor per sec. (since v = 28.2). ,that  is  when  the  law holds  good..

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#20 2007-12-02 00:45:16

luca-deltodesco
Member
Registered: 2006-05-05
Posts: 1,470

Re: a tricky problem involving physics...

the only time each link of the chain will hit the ground at the same speed, is when the chain is lying flat in the air and every link hits at the same time, if the chain is in rest vertical above ground, the links higher up will hit ground at a higher speed, the ones closer to ground, hit ground at a lower speed


The Beginning Of All Things To End.
The End Of All Things To Come.

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