Calculating the Speed of an Object Launched by a Spring Catapult

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The discussion focuses on calculating the speed of an object launched by a spring catapult, using energy equations. The initial speed is derived from the formula v=√(k(L-s)^2/m), where k is the spring constant, L is the extended length, and s is the natural length of the spring. When considering vertical launch, gravitational potential energy must be accounted for, leading to a modified equation v=√[k(L-s)^2-2mg(L-s)]/√m. There is debate over using x instead of (L-s) and simplifying the expression by removing √m from the denominator. The conversation emphasizes the importance of accurately incorporating gravitational effects in the speed calculation.
johnsholto
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A spring catapult consists of a massless spring and a massless cup. An object of a certain mass is loaded into the cup, the spring is extended to a length L, and the object is launched horizontally.

What is the speed of the object?

s is the natural length of the spring, L is the length the spring was extended to. their difference is the extension length x

E=0.5mv^2 and E=0.5kx^2 -> v=√(k(L-s)^2/m)

Now what about vertically? I assume that the speed would be less since there is the gravitational potential that changes as the spring returns to its natural length. Might the answer then be:

E=0.5mv^2 and E=0.5kx^2-mg(L-s) -> v=√[k(L-s)^2-2mg(L-s)]/√m
 
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It looks correct but why not use x instead of L-s? Also, I would remove sqrt(m) from denominator as it makes the expression easier to dedipher.
 
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