Bug lands on a frictionless sphere. Show that the Bug leaves head when

AI Thread Summary
A bug sliding down a frictionless spherical head will leave the surface after dropping a vertical distance equal to one-third of the head's radius. The conservation of energy principle can be applied, where the bug's gravitational potential energy decreases while its kinetic energy increases. The normal force acting on the bug becomes zero when it reaches this critical height, indicating it has lost contact with the surface. A force balance equation involving gravity and centripetal force is essential to demonstrate this point. Understanding the relationship between gravitational potential energy, kinetic energy, and the geometry of the sphere is crucial for solving the problem.
gills
Messages
115
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



A bug lands on top of the frictionless, spherical head of a bald man. It begins to slide down his head.

Show that the bug leaves the head when it has dropped a vertical distance 1/3 the radius of the head.


Homework Equations



Not sure. Maybe:

E_f - E_i = 0 since it is conserving energy (no friction)

and/or possibly

F=ma to calculate the normal force = 0 when the bug is 1/3 vertical h down the head somehow?



The Attempt at a Solution



Well, if i use the E_f - E_i = 0:

If the bug fell R/3 vertical displacement then its height at E_f = (2/3)R

[mg(2R/3) + (1/2)mv^2] - (mgR) = 0 ----->

not quite sure how to prove that the bug drops off the head via this method.

Thanks in advance,
Tom
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
One has to show that the bug leaves the surface at h = R/3.

At the point when and where the bug leaves the surface the normal (centrifugal) force would equal the component of gravity (centripetal force) pointing inward.

Construct a diagram which shows the bug starting at top of a sphere at R, and then it falls to h.

Determine the force balance equation and use the conservation of energy remembering the bugs starts with zero KE but with some GPE with respect to where it leaves the surface.
 
Astronuc said:
One has to show that the bug leaves the surface at h = R/3.

At the point when and where the bug leaves the surface the normal (centrifugal) force would equal the component of gravity (centripetal force) pointing inward.

Construct a diagram which shows the bug starting at top of a sphere at R, and then it falls to h.

Determine the force balance equation and use the conservation of energy remembering the bugs starts with zero KE but with some GPE with respect to where it leaves the surface.

Would setting h = R/3 be incorrect because it mentions in the problem that it falls that vertical distance then falls, so it falls off the head at (2/3)R.

I'm confused on how to use the conservation laws with Normal force and the component gravity force of the bug. Any help would be great.
 
i could use a little help on this one too if anyone's around...
 
I don't understand this myself. I've looked at it for ages, and it just doesn't seem to make sense to me at all.

I would like some help as well, lol.
 
BlackWyvern said:
I don't understand this myself. I've looked at it for ages, and it just doesn't seem to make sense to me at all.

I would like some help as well, lol.

Yea, that link helped a little, but I'm still a little confused.
 
gills said:
Would setting h = R/3 be incorrect because it mentions in the problem that it falls that vertical distance then falls, so it falls off the head at (2/3)R.

I'm confused on how to use the conservation laws with Normal force and the component gravity force of the bug. Any help would be great.
Sorry for the confusion. That is h measured from the top of the sphere rather than the horizontal diameter.

This should help

http://img166.imageshack.us/img166/6581/particleonspherepy9.jpg
images by Gert Hamacher


One needs to find the relationship between the change in GPE (=mgh) and kinetic energy (using the tangential speed v), and using the expression for centripetal acceleration and geometry, find the relationship between h and R when the force on the sphere is zero, i.e. just before the mass leaves the surface.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Back
Top