A Moment of Inertia/physical pendulum Problem

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AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the moment of inertia of a 14-cm-long wrench swinging on a hook with a period of 0.90 seconds and stretching a spring by 2.8 cm. Participants emphasize the need for a visual figure to clarify the wrench's center of mass (CM) positioning, as the CM being 14 cm from the hook raises confusion given the wrench's length. The mass of the wrench can be derived from the spring constant and the stretch, leading to the equation I = m*g*L*T^2/2π for moment of inertia. Suggestions include writing the equation of motion and using the radius of gyration to express the mass moment of inertia. The conversation highlights the importance of clear diagrams in solving physics problems effectively.
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Homework Statement


The 14-cm-long wrench in the figure swings on its hook with a period of 0.90 s. When the wrench hangs from a spring of spring constant 380 , it stretches the spring 2.8 cm
What is the wrench's moment of inertia about the hook?

cm of wrench is also 14 cm according to pic

Homework Equations


I = m*g*L*T^2/2pi

(How I found the mass)
Fsp = -ks
Fg = mg

The Attempt at a Solution


I=1.08571428*9.8*.14*.028^2/2 pi
Not the right answer not sure what to do or where to go
 
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It would really help if we had the figure; that has a lot of the information in it.

From the second sentence you should be able to compute the mass of the wrench.

It is pretty hard to understand how the CM can be 14 cm from the hook when the wrench is 14 cm long. That is why we really need to see the figure.
 
According to the figure you posted, that 14 cm is the distance from the pivot to the CM, so this is a very, very strange "14 cm long wrench."

Now write the equation of motion, and use the definition of the radius of gyration in order to express the mass moment of inertia. From the period information you should be able to find the radius of gyration. From there, you can finally go back to the MMOI itself.
 
Kindly see the attached pdf. My attempt to solve it, is in it. I'm wondering if my solution is right. My idea is this: At any point of time, the ball may be assumed to be at an incline which is at an angle of θ(kindly see both the pics in the pdf file). The value of θ will continuously change and so will the value of friction. I'm not able to figure out, why my solution is wrong, if it is wrong .
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