Ball attached to String (Potential Energy)

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the gravitational potential energy of a ball attached to a string at different reference points. For part a, the potential energy relative to the ceiling is calculated incorrectly; it should consider the height difference between the ball and the ceiling, resulting in a negative value. Part b correctly finds the potential energy relative to the floor, while part c confirms that the potential energy is zero when measured at the same height as the ball. The key takeaway is understanding the importance of height differences in potential energy calculations. Clarifications on reference points and height differences are crucial for accurate answers.
goluigi2196
Messages
20
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



A 2.40 kg ball is attached to a ceiling by a 2.00 m long string. The height of the room is 3 m. What is the gravitational potential energy of the ball relative to:

a) the ceiling?

b) the floor?

c) a point at the same elevation as the ball?

Variables
P for potential energy
m for mass in kg
g for gravity
h for height

Homework Equations


P=mgh

The Attempt at a Solution


For b), I found the answer which was 23.52.

For a), though, I got 70.56 because P=(2.4)(9.8)(3)=70.56. The 3 is from the fact that the ceiling is 3m off the ground and a) is asking about the ceiling. It says that I'm wrong

For c), I don't have any idea of what they're talking about. Is it the same thing as b)?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Energy is always relative. Potential energy is defined as the potential energy of one point, vs. the potential energy at another point. The equation, more precisely, should be written U = mg \Delta h for some different in height \Delta h \equiv h - h_0.

Usually the 'reference' point (h_0) is taken to be "zero height" (h_0 = 0), and that is often either sea-level, or ground-level, or floor-level, etc.

goluigi2196 said:
For a), though, I got 70.56 because P=(2.4)(9.8)(3)=70.56. The 3 is from the fact that the ceiling is 3m off the ground and a) is asking about the ceiling. It says that I'm wrong
While the ceiling is 3m off the ground (h_0 = 3), it is only 1m away from the ball (the ball is what you're finding the potential energy of). h = 3m - 2m = 1m

goluigi2196 said:
For c), I don't have any idea of what they're talking about. Is it the same thing as b)?
If they're asking for the potential of the ball with respect to something at the same height, what is the difference in height \Delta h?
 
ok, so I did 2.4(9.8)(1)=23.52 for a). i still get it wrong...

and for c), do i just do 2.4(9.8)(2) because it's the inverse?
 
goluigi2196 said:
ok, so I did 2.4(9.8)(1)=23.52 for a). i still get it wrong...
Sorry, forgot to highlight a key point. In this case, the ball is lower than the reference point. I.e. \Delta h = h - h_0 = 2m - 3m

goluigi2196 said:
and for c), do i just do 2.4(9.8)(2) because it's the inverse?
Its not the inverse problem. Its asking what is the potential difference between something at h = 2m, and a reference point at h_0 = 2m
 
goluigi2196 said:
..attached to a ceiling by a 2.00 m long string

How far is it between ball and ceiling? Ball and floor?
 
so will a) be negative because 2-3=-1? therefore, will the answer be -23.52?

and will c) be zero because 2-2=0 and 2.4(9.8)(0)=0?
 
@vespa71

the problem said the ceiling to the floor was 3m
 
a) will be negative becaus there's a 2! meter negative drop from the ball to the ceiling. c) is zero as there's no drop. Well done.
 
:smile:I recommend to make a simple drawing to visualize the problem. Best of luck
 
  • #10
well ok, i did 2.4(9.8)(-1). that gives me -23.52. it still tells me I'm wrong :confused:
 
  • #11
oh and thanks for c). i got it right.
 
  • #12
If you have a -2m drop from ball to ceiling, and a 1m drop from ball to floor, and a 0m drop from ball to somthing on the same level, I think it will solve.
 
Back
Top