A 0.300 kg hollow sphere is rolling along a horizontal floor

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves a 0.300 kg hollow sphere rolling along a horizontal floor and encountering a 30-degree incline. The objective is to determine how far up the incline the sphere rolls before it reverses direction, focusing on the conversion of kinetic energy to gravitational potential energy.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss using conservation of energy principles, equating kinetic energy to gravitational potential energy. There are questions about how to express height in terms of distance along the incline and the role of the incline's angle in the calculations.

Discussion Status

Some participants have provided guidance on setting up the energy equations and relating the vertical height to the distance traveled along the incline. There is an ongoing exploration of the relationships between the variables involved, with participants clarifying their understanding of the trigonometric relationships.

Contextual Notes

Participants note the absence of certain parameters, such as the radius of the sphere, and discuss assumptions like neglecting friction in the energy conversion process.

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Homework Statement



A 0.300 kg hollow sphere is rolling along a horizontal floor at 5.0 m/s when it comes to a 30 degree incline. How far up along the incline does it roll before reversing direction?

Homework Equations



Kinematics equations?


The Attempt at a Solution



I didn't even know where to begin...
 
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Since you're not given the radius of the sphere or any further angular information on it i'd simply use the conservation of energy;

all of its' kinetic energy will be converted into gravitational potential, should be easy from there.
 
Any way you could walk me through it, I'm really struggling in this course and my understanding of things is relatively low...
 
Of course, sorry;

you know that you need to find the distance at which it stops momentarily (reaches its maximum height) just before it rolls down again.

The kinetic energy it has before encountering the slope is [tex]\frac{1}{2}mv^{2}[/tex], right? Now you know by the time it stops it has lost all of this kinetic energy-> v = 0, so all of the energy (for the sake of this problem you must assume there is no friction) must have been converted into gravitational potential enegy, you rightly quoted mgh;

however be wary, you need to know the distance it travels up the plane, but remember all you're interested in is the vertical distance (for h), you know that the angle of the plane is 30 degrees, so given;

[tex]\frac{1}{2}mv^{2} = mgh[/tex] , can you think of a way of having h, the vertical height travelled, in terms of x, the distance along the plane travelled? (hint: sin)
 
Ok so KE before the hill is 1/2(0.3)(5)^2 = 3.75 J.

From there I can set that to m*g*sin(30)?...How am I finding the height?
 
the sin(30) is correct but think about it, you need the vertical component, if you think of it like a triangle;

x is the hypotenuse, the opposite side is the height (h);

[tex]sin(30) = \frac{Opposite}{Hypotenuse}[/tex]

do you see why?
 
Ok I get that.

So set 3.75 = m*g*h. Solve for h. Once I have that I can find x using sin(30) = h/the hypotenuse. But how do I find that?
 
Yep you're right

sin(30) = h / hypotenuse, the hypotenuse, remember is the distance travelled, from there i'd use your calculator, what you're doing is like;

10 = 5 / x, solve for x, but instead obviously you have sin(30) and the h which you found.
 
Ok so,

3.75 J = (0.3)(9.8)h, h = 1.28 m

sin(30) = 1.28/ hypotenuse ---> hypot = 1.28sin(30) = 0.64 m?

Did I do that properly?
 
  • #10
that's all correct apart from the last bit...

sin(30) = 1.28 / hyp so if you times both sides by the hyp;

hyp sin(30) = 1.28, and now divide by sin(30)

hyp = 1.28/sin(30)

do you see that?
 
  • #11
So once I have the hypotenuse that's my answer?

I see what you did, and I apologize for all the stupid mistakes I'm making. Things are so much simpler when someone holds your hand the entire way...

1.28/sin(30) = 2.56 m
 
  • #12
Correct
 

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