1 / 16

Lesson 35 – Hooke’s Law & Elastic Potential Energy

Lesson 35 – Hooke’s Law & Elastic Potential Energy. By: Fernando Morales September 17, 2013. Learning Goals. Derive the work kinetic energy theorem Solve problems using the work kinetic energy theorem Derive the work-gravitational potential energy theorem

penda
Download Presentation

Lesson 35 – Hooke’s Law & Elastic Potential Energy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lesson 35 – Hooke’s Law & Elastic Potential Energy By: Fernando Morales September 17, 2013

  2. Learning Goals • Derive the work kinetic energy theorem • Solve problems using the work kinetic energy theorem • Derive the work-gravitational potential energy theorem • Investigate how the change of reference points affects the calculations of potential energy

  3. Work done by a force Work done is the area under a F|| vs d curve For those with calculus, this is W = F·dx For those without calculus, we can approximate the area for a changing force with rectangles

  4. 3 2 1 0 -1 d (m) 1 2 3 F (N) X6 - 3 find the work done EXAMPLE +3 J +2 J -1 J Solution The area under the curve is 4 Nm = 4 J; areas above the axis are +ve and areas below the axis are negative

  5. Work done by spring, Potential Energy A spring (a) stores energy when compressed (b) does work when released (c)

  6. Work done by a spring (a)Relaxed spring (b) Spring stretched by force FP (+ve) the spring pulls back with force FS = -kx, -ve since x is +ve (c) Spring compressed by FP (-ve now) the spring pushes back with FS = -kx, now FS is +ve since x is –ve

  7. Spring Force and Work Done Force increases linearly as a spring is compressed Area under curve = work done Wext = kx² = EPE (EPE is Elastic Potential Energy)

  8. X6 – Spring Work done by a spring A spring with constant 1000 N/m is compressed 14 cm. Find the force applied and the work done EXAMPLE Solution Since Fa = kx, the applied force is (1000 N/m)(0.14 m) = 140 N The work done is kx² = (1000 N/m)(0.14 m)² = 9.8 J

  9. m s kx1² m Dart gun A dart with mass 0.100 kg is loaded; the spring constant is 250 N/m. The spring is compressed 6.0 cm; if the dart separates from the spring when the spring is at its normal length (x = 0) what will the dart speed be? EXAMPLE X6 - 12 Solution The only force horizontally is the spring force; vertically gravity is balanced by the normal force exerted by the barrel (in flight the dart is a projectile) WNC = 0 = KE + PE (KE + PE)b= (KE + PE)a 0 + kx1² = mv2² + 0 v2² = v2 = 3.0

  10. X6 - 13 2 kinds of PE A mass m (2.60 kg) falls from rest 55.0 cm & compresses a spring Y = 15.0 cm. Find the spring constant. Assume the spring has negligible mass and take the 0 elevation at the top of the uncompressed spring. EXAMPLE Solution y +ve up I: ball drops 55.0 cm TME1 = TME2 mv1² + mgy1 = mv2² + mgy2 0+ mgh = mv2² + 0 v2 = √2gh v2 = 3.28m/s

  11. 2 kinds of PE A mass m (2.60 kg) falls from rest 55.0 cm & compresses a spring Y = 15.0 cm. Find the spring constant. Assume the spring has negligible mass and take the 0 elevation at the top of the uncompressed spring. EXAMPLE X6 - 13 Solution y +ve up I: ball drops 55.0 cm v2 = 3.28m/s II: spring compresses 15.0 cm k = 2(mv2² + mgY) TME2 = TME3 Y² mv2² + mgy2 + kx2² = mv3² + mgy3 + ky3² k = 1580 N/m mv2² + 0 + 0= 0 - mgY+ kY²

  12. 2 kinds of PE alternate method EXAMPLE X6 - 13 Solution y +ve up spring compresses 15.0 cm after ball drops 55.0 cm TME1= TME3 mv1² + mgy1 + ky2² = mv3² + mgy3 + ky3² 0+ mgh + 0= 0 - mgY+ kY² k = 2mg(h+ Y) Y² k = 1580 N/m

  13. Bungee Jump Dave falls 15.0 m before the bungee cord begins to stretch. His mass is 75 kg and the cord obeys Hooke’s Law (F = -kx); k = 50 N/m. How far below the bridge will the jumper fall? (Ignore mass of cord and air resistance) EXAMPLE 2mg 2mg k k X6 - 13 Solution Cannot be solved with Kinematic Equations as the acceleration changes – must use Energy Conservation Dave starts with 0 KE, max GPE, 0 EPE (a); at (b) he has some KE, some GPE and 0 EPE; at (c) all energy is EPE Set low point as y = 0  h = 15 m + y Energy is conserved (no air friction) (y)² – y – (15) = 0 KEb + PEb = KEa + PEa y = 40 m or -11 m 0+ mg(15 + y) = 0 + k(y)² Dave falls 55 m total This is a quadratic!

  14. X6 - 13 m = 25 g r = 20 cm h = ? the Loop I want to release a ball and have it go around the loop shown and come out again. What is the minimum height from which I can release the ball? EXAMPLE Solution need minimum speed at top of circle  no normal force between loop and ball  only mg acting as Fc At top, mg acts down as the centripetal force mv²/r = mg  v² = rg & TME = KE + PE = m(rg) + mg(2r) = 2.5mrg So mgh = 2.5mrg  h = 2.5 r as a minimum, or 50 cm here

  15. X2 - 3 k2 k1 > k2 k1 > k2 k2 EXAMPLE Two springs have constants k1 > k2, so spring 1 is stiffer than spring 2. On which spring is more work done if (a) the force applied is the same (b) the distance stretched is the same • Consider graphs of each case. • Same force  greater stretch for weaker spring and work done (area beneath curve) is greater • Same distance  less force for weaker spring and work done (area) is less for weaker spring

  16. Required Before Next Class • Read Section 5.1from Nelson Textbook • Finish Previous Homework

More Related