New Reply

Impulsive tension question

 
Share Thread
Jul30-12, 04:58 AM   #1
 

Impulsive tension question


1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data
A particle A, of mass 3kg, is connected by light, inextensible strings to particles B and C, of masses 5kg and 1kg respectively. They lie at rest on a smooth horizontal plane, with the strings just taut and angle BAC=theta. A then receives and impulse directed away from B and C along the bisector of the angle BAC.Show that A starts to move at an angle alpha to the direction of the impulse, where

tan (alpha) = 2 sin (theta)/6-3cos(theta)

Please provide detailed explanations along with your answer, thanks in advance! :D


2. Relevant equations



3. The attempt at a solution
Sorry I don't even know where to start! Please help me with this question, thanks in advance! :)
PhysOrg.com science news on PhysOrg.com

>> Leading 3-D printer firms to merge in $403M deal (Update)
>> LA to give every student an iPad; $30M order
>> CIA faulted for choosing Amazon over IBM on cloud contract
Jul30-12, 03:44 PM   #2
 
Recognitions:
Gold Membership Gold Member
Homework Helper Homework Help
Oh goodie, another stringy problem . Ok, some things to consider:

1. What is the direction of the velocity of B after the impulse? of C?
2. There is an important constraint condition relating the velocity of A and the velocity of B after the impulse. What is it? Can you express it mathematically? Similarly for A and C.
3. What can you say about the total linear momentum of the system after the impulse? In particular, what is the value of the component of the total momentum in a direction that’s perpendicular to the impulse?
New Reply

Tags
impulse, impulsive tension, mechanics, momentum, physics

Similar discussions for: Impulsive tension question
Thread Forum Replies
Impulsive tension problem involving two particles Introductory Physics Homework 5
Impulsive Tension Question Introductory Physics Homework 4
impulsive tension Classical Physics 1
need help with impulsive tension in an inextensible string. Introductory Physics Homework 1
Momentum And Direct Impact. Subtopic: Impulsive Tension. Advanced Physics Homework 0