How Far Will a Bungee Cord Stretch During a Jump?

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves a bungee jump scenario where a 70.0 kg woman jumps with a bungee cord of length 5.00 m and a spring constant of 122.08 N/m. The discussion focuses on calculating the maximum stretch of the bungee cord, the total mechanical energy of the system, the stretch at maximum speed, and the maximum speed attained during the jump.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the use of gravitational potential energy, kinetic energy, and spring energy in the context of the jump. Some suggest finding the initial speed after free fall and relating it to the distance covered. Others propose drawing a sketch to distinguish different phases of the jump and question the meaning of "total mechanical energy." There is also a discussion about the significance of the maximum velocity point and its relation to equilibrium.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing with various approaches being explored. Some participants have offered hints and guidance on how to set up the energy equations and consider different phases of the jump. There is no explicit consensus yet, but the conversation is productive, with participants encouraging each other to continue working through the problem.

Contextual Notes

Participants are navigating the complexities of energy conservation and the implications of different phases of the bungee jump. There are indications of confusion regarding the definitions and assumptions in the problem, particularly concerning the maximum speed and equilibrium point.

coglon
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I am stumped... very hard question:
"A 70.0kg woman does a bungee jump. The length of the bungee cord is 5.00m and it has a spring constant of 122.08 N/m. Assume the gravitational field strength is 9.81 N/kg.

a)What is the maximun distance the bungee cord will stretch and how far will the jumper be below her initial start point?

b)How much is the total mechanical energy of the system?

c)How far will the bungee cord be stretched when the jumper is moving at her maximun speed? What is this point called? <- I think its called the equilibrium point.

d)What is the maximun speed the jumper will atain."

So as you can see this is a very difficult question. I've taken some stabs at it with no luck. Heres what I've done so far.. but it might be wrong: I found that the initial speed will begin when cord starts to stretch so after 5m of free fall I found Velocity intial would be 9.9m/s then I started my equations:

Total Energy Mechnical (Emt) = Potential Energy Gravity (-ΔEpg) + Kinetic Energy (ΔEk)
Emt= -ΔEpg + ΔEk
Emt -ΔEpg = Eps (Potential spring Energy)
mgh= 1/2kx² height= x+5 where x is the stretch of the bungee cord
mg(x+5)=1/2kx²
√(2mg(x+5))/x= x
as you can see I am going nowhere... what i got lead to a quadratique equation... I don't know if I need to use one or not

Could some one help me solve this question or atleast get me started.

Thanks for help

Cogon,
 
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I think maybe you should find the speed at the point when the woman as covered 5 meters, using Free Fall, and the probably relate that to when it has covered x distance.

Yes there's Gravitational Potential Energy and Spring Energy, but also kinetic energy.
 
k, some hints:
- draw a scetch of the process and try to distinguish different phases (the phase before he jumps would be the 1st one, for example).
- try Emt = Epg(h) + Ek(h) + Eps(h). Beware of my different sign-convention but you should be able to translate to yours. Ask yourself why all of the three "contributing energies" are only dependent of the height!
- above energy Emt is conserved as it´s the total energy (not 100% sure what "total mechanical energy" is supposed to be but most probably that).

specific hints:
a) What makes that point special? It should be one of the phases I suggested above.
b) assuming it´s really the conserved total energy that´s meant the question is trivial and only depends on where you set x=0. Chose any phase that seems appropriate to you.
c) I really don´t know what your teacher wants to hear there but "maximum velocity" really doesn´t sound like "equilibrium" to me. Equilibrium between what, btw?
d) If you know the point where the maximum velocity is attained then calculating it out is easy.
 
coglon said:
mgh= 1/2kx² height= x+5 where x is the stretch of the bungee cord
mg(x+5)=1/2kx²
√(2mg(x+5))/x= x
as you can see I am going nowhere... what i got lead to a quadratique equation... I don't know if I need to use one or not
Don't give up so easily. You are on the right track. Now solve the quadratic equation to find the maximum extension (x) of the cord.
 

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