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PhysicsHatesMe01
Aug3-06, 05:38 PM
Question:

A phone cord is 3.75 m long. The cord has a mass of 0.200 kg. A transverse wave pulse is produced by plucking one end of the taut cord. The pulse makes four trips down and back along the cord in 0.915 s. What is the tension in the cord?

Maybe I'm using the wrong formula or my math is off. Help?

M = .200kg
L = 3.75m
P = .915s

U=M/L= .200/3.75 = .0533

C=(3.75)(4)/.915= 16.3934

(16.3934)^2 (.0533) = 143.2

But, 143.2 isn't right.

Thanks for help. I really hate it when I think I know what I'm doing, but I don't get the answer. It's really annoying.

berkeman
Aug3-06, 07:20 PM
Let's check a couple things. What equation are you using to relate the mass per unit length, the propagation velocity, and the tension? And in your last line of calculations, be sure to include units to serve as a check that you haven't left anything out.


EDIT -- Pretty funny, I just saw your PF handle. Well, welcome to PF anyway! :rofl:

PhysicsHatesMe01
Aug3-06, 09:25 PM
I can't find the equation I used for what's shown above, for some reason.

I did find this one online: v = (T/(m/L))^0.5

and when I re-arranged it to find T, I got v^2(m)(L)=T which, when I plugged in the numbers, came out to .0021, which doesn't seem right.

I don't know what I'm doing. I don't get physics at all... even with a tutor :(

PhysicsHatesMe01
Aug3-06, 09:37 PM
I found a similar problem online:

A phone cord is 4.20 m long. The cord has a mass of 0.180 kg. A transverse wave pulse is produced by plucking one end of the taut cord. The pulse makes four trips down and back along the cord in 0.745 s. What is the tension in the cord? ___ N

Solution 23660

Mass: m = 0.180 kg
Length: L = 4.20 m
u = m / L = 0.180 / 4.20 = 3/70
c = (4.20 * 4) / 0.745 = 3360/149
T = (3360/149)^2 * (3/70) = approximately 21.8
The tension is 21.8 N.


I don't know what formula they used, but that's the same thing I did at first. I just plugged in my numbers again and I'm still getting the wrong answer.

andrevdh
Aug4-06, 02:30 AM
......
I did find this one online: v = (T/(m/L))^0.5

and when I re-arranged it to find T, I got v^2(m)(L)=T ......

You need to take it slow. Work on the paper. That is do not skip steps. Keep it simple - do not try to leave out obvious steps. That way you tend to make errors. The formula conversion to T above is not corrcect.

PhysicsHatesMe01
Aug4-06, 08:34 AM
Keeping(m/L) together, I now got:

V^2*(M/L)=T

and I get 16.39^2/.0533=5042 and that seems too high.

I know I should square v because anything to the 1/2 power = a sq. root...

andrevdh
Aug5-06, 03:44 PM
I get the same answer. It is difficult to put the answer into perspective. Hanging 500 kg (6 persons!) from a 200 g string (quite a thick/heavy string for its length)? Causing a disturbance to travel at only 16 m/s (seems a bit slow for the given tension)? At what rate will it vibrate? This seems like an artificial problem to me - it probably does not represents something in real life.