Ballistic Pendulum displacement

In summary, the conversation discusses an experiment involving a ballistic pendulum and two different handguns. The goal is to find the ratio of the initial speed of the bullets fired from each handgun. The solution involves using the equation v = ((m+M)/m)*sqrt(2gL[1 - cos(theta)]) and converting the masses to grams to get the correct velocities. Ultimately, the conversation concludes with the correct ratio being 0.70, after a calculation error is corrected.
  • #1
kevina
10
0
The Question
In a ballistic pendulum an object of mass m is fired with an initial speed v_0 at a pendulum bob. The bob has a mass M, which is suspended by a rod of length L and negligible mass. After the collision, the pendulum and object stick together and swing to a maximum angular displacement (theta) as shown
1010989A.jpg


An experiment is done to compare the initial speed of bullets fired from different handguns: a 9 mm and a .44 caliber. The guns are fired into a 10-kg pendulum bob of length L. Assume that the 9-mm bullet has a mass of 6 g and the .44-caliber bullet has a mass of 12 g . If the 9-mm bullet causes the pendulum to swing to a maximum angular displacement of 4.3degrees and the .44-caliber bullet causes a displacement of 10.1degrees , find the ratio of the initial speed of the 9-mm bullet to the speed of the .44-caliber bullet, (v_0)_9/(v_0)_44.

My Solution

I already found the inital speed of the fired object: v = ((m+M)/m)*sqrt(2gL[1 - cos(theta)]). So I am given m (bullet mass), M (block's mass), g (gravity), and theta. I plugged those into the equation and got (v_0)_44=((10kg + .012)/10kg)*sqrt(2*9.8*L[1 - cos 10.1]) and (v_0)_9=((10kg + .006)/10kg)*sqrt(2*9.8*L[1 - cos 4.3]).
Am I on the right track? What happens after?
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
You have the masses subtracted not added in the equation... Supposed to be added...

Once you solve for each velocity... Then you do the ratio of one to the other like you had above.
 
  • #3
Oh, my mistake. That's a typo right there. I editted it already. Let me try to solve it.
 
Last edited:
  • #4
I got .443 for the 9mm and .633 for the .44-caliber. Is this right? The numbers look weird.
 
  • #5
kevina said:
I got .443 for the 9mm and .633 for the .44-caliber. Is this right? The numbers look weird.

Yes the velocities should be much higher than that.. Since they move a 10kg block a decent distance...
 
  • #6
Yeah something is missing.. I currently don't have my equations with me for this particular problem...

I am not totally positive the equation is correct... let me check
 
  • #7
Ok, am I on the right track?

I've got these two equations:
(v_0)_9=((10 + .006)/10)*sqrt(2*9.8*L[1 - cos 4.3])
(v_0)_44=((10 + .012)/10)*sqrt(2*9.8*L[1 - cos 10.1])

I'm solving for velocity. When I find (v_0)_9 and (v_0)_44, I can just divide them to get the answer. I got .70. Is it a calculation error? Or is there something wrong with my equations?
 
  • #8
kevina said:
Ok, am I on the right track?

I've got these two equations:
(v_0)_9=((10 + .006)/10)*sqrt(2*9.8*L[1 - cos 4.3])
(v_0)_44=((10 + .012)/10)*sqrt(2*9.8*L[1 - cos 10.1])

I'm solving for velocity. When I find (v_0)_9 and (v_0)_44, I can just divide them to get the answer. I got .70. Is it a calculation error? Or is there something wrong with my equations?

I also get 0.70 using the same equations... which does sound right...

I think the velocities you are getting are correct just off by a factor by a thousand... I am thinking the mass has to be converted to grams... which gets you velocities that make more sense.
 
  • #9
How will it change the result? Because (10000+6)/10000 and (10000+12)/10000 is still the same as when it was in kg.
 
Last edited:
  • #10
Just looking at this quickly, but shouldn't the entire expression for the velocity be included in the square root? So it would be v = sqrt ((m+M)/m)(2gL[1 - cos(theta)]).
 
  • #11
No, I'm pretty sure v = ((m+M)/m)*sqrt(2gL[1 - cos(theta)]) is correct.
 
  • #12
You're right on your equation, however when you put the numbers in you're dividing m+M by M, when you should be using m the mass of the ball. so it's
(10+.006)/.006,
not
(10+.006)/10
 

1. What is a ballistic pendulum displacement?

A ballistic pendulum displacement is a physics experiment used to determine the velocity of a projectile by measuring the displacement of a pendulum that is struck by the projectile.

2. How does a ballistic pendulum displacement work?

In a ballistic pendulum displacement, a pendulum is set up with a known mass and length. A projectile, such as a bullet, is fired into the pendulum and gets embedded in it. The resulting displacement of the pendulum is then measured and used to calculate the initial velocity of the projectile.

3. What factors can affect the accuracy of a ballistic pendulum displacement?

The accuracy of a ballistic pendulum displacement can be affected by factors such as air resistance, friction, and imperfections in the setup of the experiment. Additionally, the pendulum itself may have imperfections or errors in measurement that can impact the accuracy of the results.

4. What are the applications of ballistic pendulum displacement?

Ballistic pendulum displacement is commonly used in forensics to determine the velocity of a bullet or other projectile in a crime scene. It is also used in physics education as a practical demonstration of the principles of conservation of momentum and energy.

5. What are the limitations of a ballistic pendulum displacement?

A ballistic pendulum displacement may not be suitable for measuring the velocity of very small or very fast projectiles. It also assumes that the collision between the projectile and the pendulum is perfectly elastic, which may not always be the case. The accuracy of the results can also be affected by human error in measurement and calculation.

Similar threads

  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
20
Views
1K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
9
Views
685
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
21
Views
1K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
7
Views
3K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
2
Views
3K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
7
Views
5K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
26
Views
1K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
11
Views
3K
Replies
10
Views
940
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
3
Views
1K
Back
Top