Energy problem on bungee jumper

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    Bungee Energy
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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves a bungee jumper's motion, focusing on energy conservation principles. The jumper's mass, the height of the platform, the unstretched length of the bungee cord, and the force constant of the cord are provided. The goal is to determine the jumper's speed at a specific height during the fall.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the calculation of elastic potential energy and the total energy of the system. There are questions about the values used for the stretch of the bungee cord and the assumptions made regarding energy conservation.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants questioning the calculations and assumptions made regarding the elastic potential energy and the total energy. Some guidance has been offered on how to approach the calculation of the stretch of the bungee cord.

Contextual Notes

Participants are exploring the implications of using different values for the stretch of the bungee cord and the potential for miscalculating total energy. There is a focus on ensuring the correct interpretation of the problem's parameters.

decamij
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I'm having trouble solving this problem. can n e one help me?

A bungee jumper of mass 64.5 kg (including safety gear) is
standing on a platform 48.0 m above a river. The length of
the unstretched bungee cord is 10.1 m. The force constant
of the cord is 65.5 N/m. The jumper falls from rest and just
touches the water at a speed of zero. The cord acts like an
ideal spring. Use conservation of energy to determine the
jumper’s speed at a height of 12.5 m above the water on
the first fall.

I used the work equation to find the total energy, then subtracted the elastic potential energy and gravitational potential energy at 12.5m above ground. Then i solved for Ek, and used THAT equation to solve for speed.
i got 9.29m/s, but the answer is 6.37m/s.

What did i do wrong?
 
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What were the numbers that you put into the term for elastic potential energy?
 
elastic potential energy is E = 0.5 kx^2, right?

I put: k = 65.5, x = 35.5 FIRST, but then i ended up getting a negative answer, so i used x = 12.5.

But is what i tried to do correct, did i miss anything? I'm starting to think that i calculated the total energy wrong. What did you get for total energy?
 
decamij said:
elastic potential energy is E = 0.5 kx^2, right?
Correct.
I put: k = 65.5, x = 35.5 FIRST, but then i ended up getting a negative answer, so i used x = 12.5.
Both x = 35.5 m and x = 12.5 m are wrong. How much is the cord stretched (beyond its unstretched length) when the jumper is 12.5 m above the water?
 
you should find the "delta X", by this equation: mgh=.5kx^2, I got 30.45 m for delta X,
then you should put this value in the equation: mgh=.5kx^2+mgh`+.5mv^2 and find the velocity..the initial X, 10.1, is extra in the given problem.
 

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