xboy
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Maybe I should have posted this question in 'elementary physics' but the question seemed rather difficult to me(although involving elementary concepts) so i am posting it at this forum.Here goes.
A block of mass m is attached to a spring of spring constant k.the other end of the spring is attached to a wall.The mass rests on a surface with friction coefficient [tex]\mu[/tex].Now the mass is given a displacement [tex]x_{0}[/tex] from its equilibrium position.Calculate x at any subsequent time.
The forces acting on the block are(taking the equilibrium position as origin)
force due to the spring:
[tex]\\F_{spring} = -kxi\hat \\[/tex]
[tex] \\ F_{friction} = \mu mgi\hat \\ \mbox{ when the block is moving in the -i direction}[/tex]
[tex] F_{friction} = -\mu mgi\hat \\ \mbox{ when the block is moving in +i direction}[/tex]
The equations i obtain are
[tex]m\ddot x +kx = \mu mg\ \mbox{when moving towards -i} \\[/tex]
[tex] \\ \mbox{and} m\ddot x + kx = -\mu mg\ \mbox{when moving towards +i}[/tex]
Solving them i get,for the first half cycle:
[tex] \\x = (x_{0} - \frac{\mu mg}{k})\cos \frac{k}{m}t + \frac{\mu mg}{k}\\[/tex]
[tex] <br /> \mbox{At the end of the first half cycle,the position of the block is,then } x'_{0} = -x_{o} + 2\frac{\mu mg}{k}[/tex]
[tex] \\ \mbox{Now,if i take t= 0 at} x= x'_{0} \ \mbox{ ,i get,from solving the second differential equation}[/tex]
[tex] \\x = -( x'_{o}+ \frac{\mu mg}{k}) \cos \frac{k}{m}t - \frac{\mu mg}{k}[/tex]
[tex] \mbox{At the end of this half-cycle the position is }[/tex]
[tex] x_{0} - 4\frac{\mu mg}{k} [/tex]
So I'm getting the result that for each half cycle the distance traversed goes down by [tex]2\frac{\mu mg}{k}[/tex].I get the same reult from work-energy theorem.
is my method correct?if yes,is there a more elegant way of doing it?is there at least an elegant way of writing the answer?In my answer I'm putting t=0 at the start of each half-cycle,so i can't boil it down to less than 2 equations.
P.S:this is te first time I'm using latex.
Homework Statement
A block of mass m is attached to a spring of spring constant k.the other end of the spring is attached to a wall.The mass rests on a surface with friction coefficient [tex]\mu[/tex].Now the mass is given a displacement [tex]x_{0}[/tex] from its equilibrium position.Calculate x at any subsequent time.
Homework Equations
The forces acting on the block are(taking the equilibrium position as origin)
force due to the spring:
[tex]\\F_{spring} = -kxi\hat \\[/tex]
[tex] \\ F_{friction} = \mu mgi\hat \\ \mbox{ when the block is moving in the -i direction}[/tex]
[tex] F_{friction} = -\mu mgi\hat \\ \mbox{ when the block is moving in +i direction}[/tex]
The Attempt at a Solution
The equations i obtain are
[tex]m\ddot x +kx = \mu mg\ \mbox{when moving towards -i} \\[/tex]
[tex] \\ \mbox{and} m\ddot x + kx = -\mu mg\ \mbox{when moving towards +i}[/tex]
Solving them i get,for the first half cycle:
[tex] \\x = (x_{0} - \frac{\mu mg}{k})\cos \frac{k}{m}t + \frac{\mu mg}{k}\\[/tex]
[tex] <br /> \mbox{At the end of the first half cycle,the position of the block is,then } x'_{0} = -x_{o} + 2\frac{\mu mg}{k}[/tex]
[tex] \\ \mbox{Now,if i take t= 0 at} x= x'_{0} \ \mbox{ ,i get,from solving the second differential equation}[/tex]
[tex] \\x = -( x'_{o}+ \frac{\mu mg}{k}) \cos \frac{k}{m}t - \frac{\mu mg}{k}[/tex]
[tex] \mbox{At the end of this half-cycle the position is }[/tex]
[tex] x_{0} - 4\frac{\mu mg}{k} [/tex]
So I'm getting the result that for each half cycle the distance traversed goes down by [tex]2\frac{\mu mg}{k}[/tex].I get the same reult from work-energy theorem.
is my method correct?if yes,is there a more elegant way of doing it?is there at least an elegant way of writing the answer?In my answer I'm putting t=0 at the start of each half-cycle,so i can't boil it down to less than 2 equations.
P.S:this is te first time I'm using latex.
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