Physics Questions: Frictionless Incline + Pendulum Speed

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In summary, the first question involves sliding a box down a frictionless incline with a vertical rise of 4.0m and a slope of 9.0m. The speed of the box at the bottom is determined by the conservation of energy equation v2 = 2gh, which leads to a final speed of 13.3m/s. The second question deals with a pendulum that is raised to a height of 0.25m above the equilibrium position. Using the same conservation of energy equation, the speed of the pendulum bob at the equilibrium position is found to be 2.2m/s. Both questions require an understanding of conservative fields.
  • #1
convict11
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Hello all, just started taking physics 30, or pyhsics 12 and need some help with two questions. Any help is appreciated.

1. A frictionless incline with a vertical rise of 4.0m and a slope of 9.0m is used to slide a box from the 4.0m height. If the box starts from rest at the top of the incline what is its speed at the bottom.

2. A 1.0m pendulum is raised to a 0.25m height above the equilibrium position. What is the speed of the pendulum bob as it passes through the equilibrium position.

Yea probably easy questions and supposed to be review but having a hard time with them, lol. Thanks for any help.
 
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  • #2
Both questions are to do with conservation of energy (surprise!).

Try not to get caught up in thinking it's more complex than this - Ask yourself what kind of energy they have at the start of the experiment and what they have at the point of measurement (no friction so no losses to worry about).

Formulate it in a mathematical expression and the answer you require will drop out.
 
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  • #3
hrm

Well I come up with the equation v2 = 2gh , but since there is a slope of 9m in the 4 meter plane dosent that change anything.
 
  • #4
The slope won't change anything because, in the absence of friction, PE + KE = constant (as you have rightly used in your calculation). So it's the magitude of the change in PE that affects your KE at the end, not how you get there.

It's a property a "conservative field" which you may want to look at if you need a deeper understanding.
 
  • #5
Thanks =)

Thanks.
v2 = 2gh
v2 = 2(9.81)(9.0m)
v2= 176.58m/s
v = 13.3m/s

v2 = 2gh
v2 = 2(9.81)(0.25m)
v2 = 4.905
v = 2.2m/s

Is what I ended up with. Least I am on the right track I hope. =)

Edit: Also going to look up what you suggested "conservative field"
 

1. What is a frictionless incline?

A frictionless incline is a hypothetical situation where the surface of an inclined plane has no friction, allowing objects to slide down without any resistance or loss of energy due to friction.

2. How does the angle of the incline affect the speed of an object sliding down?

The steeper the angle of the incline, the faster an object will slide down due to the force of gravity pulling it down at a steeper angle.

3. What is the relationship between the mass of the object and its speed on a frictionless incline?

According to Newton's Second Law, the acceleration of an object is directly proportional to its mass when the force acting on it remains constant. Therefore, on a frictionless incline, the speed of an object will increase as its mass increases.

4. How does the length of the incline affect the speed of the object?

The longer the incline, the greater the distance the object has to accelerate, resulting in a higher speed at the bottom of the incline.

5. How does a pendulum's speed change on a frictionless incline?

A frictionless incline does not affect the speed of a pendulum because the force of gravity and the length of the pendulum remain constant. However, the angle of the incline may affect the direction of the pendulum's swing.

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