Irregular beam physics homework

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around solving a physics homework problem involving a 1750-N irregular beam suspended by two vertical wires. The key calculations involve determining the tensions in the wires using torque equilibrium and the relationship between the forces. The wave speeds on each wire are calculated, leading to the arrival times of the pulses at the ceiling. The final results indicate that the wave on String A arrives first, with a time delay of 0.006 seconds between the two pulses. Participants emphasize the importance of not rounding off calculations too early for accuracy.
MrShimizu
Messages
5
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



A 1750-N irregular beam is haning horizontally by its ends from the ceiling by two vertical wires (A and B), each 1.25m long and weighing 2.50N. The center of gravity of this beam is one third of the way along the beam from the end where wire A is attached. A) If you pluck both strings at the same time at the beam, what is the time delay between the arrival of the two pulses at the ceiling? B) Which pulse arrives first?


Homework Equations



T_a + T_b = 1750
Sum of all forces = 0.
wave speed = sqrt(force/linear mass density)
C_g is L/3 from A and 2L/3 from B

The Attempt at a Solution



I really just have hit a logical block and have no idea what to do.
------
L = 1.25
m = .255
mu = mass/length = .204
To find the force I tried: T = F * L/3
with F = 1750, a guess, really
1.25*1750/3 = 729.1666

Now I can't decide what to do with that number or even if it is a correct answer.
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org


MrShimizu said:
L = 1.25
m = .255
mu = mass/length = .204
OK.
To find the force I tried: T = F * L/3
with F = 1750, a guess, really
Don't guess. Set the net torque on the beam to zero and solve for the two tensions.
1.25*1750/3 = 729.1666
Not sure what you're doing here. Why did you multiply by 1.25?

Once you find the force, use it and mu to find the speed of the pulse. How long does each pulse take to travel to the ceiling?
 


Don't guess. Set the net torque on the beam to zero and solve for the two tensions.

Such that:
F1L1-F2L2=0

L1 = 1.25/3 = .417
L2 = 2*1.25/3 = .833

?
 


MrShimizu said:
Such that:
F1L1-F2L2=0
Yes.

L1 = 1.25/3 = .417
L2 = 2*1.25/3 = .833
No, the 1.25 is the length of the strings, not the length of the beam. Call the length of the beam "L". Then what are L1 and L2 in terms of L? You don't need the actual length of the beam--which isn't given--to solve for the forces.
 


No, the 1.25 is the length of the strings, not the length of the beam.
This made me feel particularly... obtuse.

L1 = L/3
L2 = 2L/3

Then:
F1L1 - F2L2 = 0
(F1*L)/3 - (F2*2L)/3 = 0

Should F1+F2 = -1750?
 


MrShimizu said:
L1 = L/3
L2 = 2L/3

Then:
F1L1 - F2L2 = 0
(F1*L)/3 - (F2*2L)/3 = 0
Good. Keep simplifying this. How does F1 relate to F2?

Should F1+F2 = -1750?
Yes, but get rid of the minus sign. Then you can solve for the forces by combining the two equations.
 


F1 = 2F2
I got that from isolating F1 in the earlier equation.

By plugging that into the lower equation

F1=1166.67
F2=583.33

v = sqrt(f/mu)

v1=75.62m/s
v2=53.46m/s

t=d/v;d=1.25m

t1=.017s
t2=.023s

Delta_t = .006s
The wave on String A arrives first.
 


MrShimizu said:
F1 = 2F2
I got that from isolating F1 in the earlier equation.

By plugging that into the lower equation

F1=1166.67
F2=583.33

v = sqrt(f/mu)

v1=75.62m/s
v2=53.46m/s

t=d/v;d=1.25m

t1=.017s
t2=.023s

Delta_t = .006s
The wave on String A arrives first.
Excellent!

My only suggestion would be to not round off to two significant figures until the end. (Use 3 sig figs when you calculate the time--that will give you a slightly different Delta t.)
 


Thank you very much for your help, good Sir.

I'll also modify my answer as you advised.

Thanks again!
 
Back
Top