Man and Woman on Boat - Velocity of Boat after Dive

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The discussion revolves around calculating the velocity of a boat after a man and woman dive off it, each with a velocity of 16 ft/s relative to the boat. Participants clarify that the initial velocities of the divers relative to the boat are indeed zero before diving, and the problem requires using conservation of momentum to find the boat's velocity after each diver jumps. The correct approach involves setting up equations that account for the boat's initial state and the subsequent velocities of the divers. After resolving misunderstandings about the equations, participants confirm the final velocities of the boat as 9.20 ft/s and 9.37 ft/s, depending on the order of the dives. The discussion emphasizes the importance of correctly applying the conservation of momentum principle in dynamic systems.
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Homework Statement



A 180-lb man and a 120-lb woman stand side by side at the same end of a 300-lb boat, ready to dive, each with a 16-ft/s velocity relative to the boat. Determine the velocity of the boat after they have both dived, if (a) the woman dives first, (b) the man dives first.

Answers:
(a) 9.20 ft/s (to the left)
(b) 9.37 ft/s (to the left)

diving.jpg


Homework Equations



F=ma

The Attempt at a Solution



What does "...each with a velocity of 16-ft/s relative to the boat..." mean? If the man and woman are both standing on the boat, wouldn't their velocities relative to the boat be 0-ft/s?

Is 16-ft/s the velocities of each of them w.r.t. the boat afteir their respective dives?

Do they dive straight out or with x- and y- components (as in a ballistics eqn)?

Do we assume the motion (diving, boat's reaction) is all in the x-direction?

Aside from the question being highly vague, I've attempted (and failed) to solve the problem using impulse-momentum equations below.
____________________________________________________________

(Woman jumps first, creating an action-reaction pair of forces Fwand -Fw. So, she jumps and pushes off with a force equal to Fw. The boat feels -Fw.)

Impulse-momentum equation for Boat + Man (Eqn 1):
m_{(B+M)}v_{(B+M)}+F_{W}t=m_{(B+M)}v'_{(B+M)}

Impulse-momentum equation for Woman (Eqn 2):
m_Wv_W-F_Wt=m_Wv'_W

Adding Eqn 1 and Eqn 2:
0=m_{(B+M)}v'_{(B+M)}+m_Wv'_W
v'_{(B+M)}=\frac{-m_Wv'_W}{m_{(B+M)}}=-4ft/s

Then the man jumps...:

Impulse-momentum equation for Boat (Eqn 3):
\left ( m_B \right )\left ( \frac{-m_Wv'_W}{m_{(B+M)}} \right )+F_Mt=m_Bv'_B

Impulse-momentum equation for Man (Eqn 4):
\left ( m_M \right )\left ( \frac{-m_Wv'_W}{m_{(B+M)}} \right )-F_Mt=m_Mv'_M

Adding Eqn 3 and Eqn 4:
V'_B=\frac{\left ( m_B+m_M \right )(-4)-(m_M)(16)}{m_B}=-16ft/s

So, I found that the boat moves at -16 ft/s after both the man and woman jump. That's not the correct answer of -9.20 ft/s. Am I overcomplicating this whole matter? Is there some kind of m1v1+m2v1=m1v2+m2v2 way of solving it (conservation of linear momentum)?
 
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Hi JJBladester! :smile:
JJBladester said:
A 180-lb man and a 120-lb woman stand side by side at the same end of a 300-lb boat, ready to dive, each with a 16-ft/s velocity relative to the boat. Determine the velocity of the boat after they have both dived, if (a) the woman dives first, (b) the man dives first.

What does "...each with a velocity of 16-ft/s relative to the boat..." mean? If the man and woman are both standing on the boat, wouldn't their velocities relative to the boat be 0-ft/s?

Is 16-ft/s the velocities of each of them w.r.t. the boat afteir their respective dives?

Do they dive straight out or with x- and y- components (as in a ballistics eqn)?

Do we assume the motion (diving, boat's reaction) is all in the x-direction?

Aside from the question being highly vague, I've attempted (and failed) to solve the problem using impulse-momentum equations below.
____________________________________________________________

Woman jumps first, creating an action-reaction pair of forces Fwand -Fw. So, she jumps and pushes off with a force equal to Fw. The boat feels -Fw.

Is there some kind of m1v1+m2v1=m1v2+m2v2 way of solving it (conservation of linear momentum)?

erm :redface:yes!

all the question means is that vperson - vboat = 16 ft/s (that's the x components … the y components won't affect the position of the boat, will they? :wink:)

so just put that into your conservation of momentum equations :smile:
 
tiny-tim said:
Hi JJBladester! :smile:erm :redface:yes!

all the question means is that vperson - vboat = 16 ft/s (that's the x components … the y components won't affect the position of the boat, will they? :wink:)

so just put that into your conservation of momentum equations :smile:

My conservation of momentum equations seem to get me to the same place:

Woman Jumps:

m_Bv_B+m_Mv_M+m_Wv_W=(m_B+m_M)v'_{(B+M)}+m_Wv_W

v'_{(B+M)}=\frac{-m_Wv'_W}{m_B+m_M}=-4ft/s

Then Man Jumps:

(m_B+m_M)v'_{(B+M)}=m_Bv''_B+m_Mv''_M

v''_B=\frac{(m_B+m_M)v'_{(B+M)}-m_Mv''_M}{m_B}=-16ft/s
 
I'm confused …

where does the given v1 - v2 = 16 come in that? :confused:
 
tiny-tim said:
where does the given v1 - v2 = 16 come in

v_{person}-v_{boat}=16

v_{person}=v_{boat}+16

Woman Jumps:

(m_{boat}+m_{woman}+m_{man})v_{boat}=(m_{boat}+m_{man})v'_{boat}+m_{woman}(v_{boat}+16)

v'_{boat}=\frac{(m_{boat}+m_{woman}+m_{man})v_{boat}-m_{woman}(v_{boat}+16)}{m_{boat}+m_{man}}=-4ft/s

Then Man Jumps:

(m_{man}+m_{boat})v'_{boat}=m_{boat}v''_{boat}+m_{man}(v'_{boat}+16)

v''_{boat}=\frac{(m_{man}+m_{boat})v'_{boat}-m_{man}(v'_{boat}+16)}{m_{boat}}=-13.6ft/s

Still not getting the desired answer of -9.20 ft/s... Any other pointers?
 
It's very difficult to follow what you're doing without seeing any figures.

The initial speed of the boat is zero … have you used that? :confused:
 
Yes, I did use that. Then, all of the masses (m_m, m_w, and m_b) were all just their weights divided by 32.2.

v'_{boat}=\frac{\left [(300/32.2)+(120/32.2)+(180/32.2) \right ]0-(120/32.2)(0+16)}{(300/32.2)+(180/32.2)}

v''_{boat}=\frac{\left [(180/32.2)+(300/32.2) \right ](-4)-(180/32.2)(-4+16)}{(300/32.2)}

Doing the above calculations did not yield the correct answer of -9.20 ft/s for v''_{boat}
 
Last edited:
(just got up :zzz: …)

No, your (0 + 16) should be (v'boat + 16) …

v'woman = v'boat + 16 …

if the boat was fixed, v'woman would be 16, so since the boat isn't fixed, v'woman will obviously be less.

(and there's no need to divide everything by g … the ∑mv equation works just as well with weights instead of masses)
 
JJBladester said:
v_{person}-v_{boat}=16

v_{person}=v_{boat}+16

Woman Jumps:

(m_{boat}+m_{woman}+m_{man})v_{boat}=(m_{boat}+m_{man})v'_{boat}+m_{woman}(v_{boat}+16)

v'_{boat}=\frac{(m_{boat}+m_{woman}+m_{man})v_{boat}-m_{woman}(v_{boat}+16)}{m_{boat}+m_{man}}=-4ft/s

Then Man Jumps:

(m_{man}+m_{boat})v'_{boat}=m_{boat}v''_{boat}+m_{man}(v'_{boat}+16)

v''_{boat}=\frac{(m_{man}+m_{boat})v'_{boat}-m_{man}(v'_{boat}+16)}{m_{boat}}=-13.6ft/s

Still not getting the desired answer of -9.20 ft/s... Any other pointers?


You've almost got it with this equation:

(m_{boat}+m_{woman}+m_{man})v_{boat}=(m_{boat}+m_{man})v'_{boat}+m_{woman}(v_{boat}+16)

But you have made one mistake...the initial velocity of the boat ( v_{boat} ) is zero. So the whole left side of the eqn goes away. Also the velocity of the woman ISN'T (v_{boat}+16), it is (v'_{boat}+16). Fix that and your equation should yield -3.2ft/s for the velocity of the boat after the woman jumps. Then setup a similar equation for the man and you should get the correct answer of -9.2ft/s.
 
  • #10
tiny-tim said:
(just got up :zzz: …)

No, your (0 + 16) should be (v'boat + 16) …

v'woman = v'boat + 16 …

if the boat was fixed, v'woman would be 16, so since the boat isn't fixed, v'woman will obviously be less.

(and there's no need to divide everything by g … the ∑mv equation works just as well with weights instead of masses)


tiny-tim, I appreciate your help! I also learned something valuable, that if gravity (g) is going to cancel out in the end, don't bother converting all of the weights to masses. It's an unnecessary step. Awesome.


Xerxes1986 said:
You've almost got it with this equation:

(m_{boat}+m_{woman}+m_{man})v_{boat}=(m_{boat}+m_{man})v'_{boat}+m_{woman}(v_{boat}+16)

...the velocity of the woman ISN'T (v_{boat}+16), it is (v'_{boat}+16). Fix that and your equation should yield -3.2ft/s for the velocity of the boat after the woman jumps. Then setup a similar equation for the man and you should get the correct answer of -9.2ft/s.

Xerxes, thanks for the help. That was where I went wrong... And I obtained the correct answers after working it out using v' for the woman's jump and v'' for the man's jump.

Case closed on this ambiguously written textbook problem. Whew!
 
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