Originally posted by HallsofIvy
Odd. About 99% of the time I agree with your posts and then you come up with something I consider outrageous (which means I come up with something you consider outrageous, of course).
Well, I guess that means you are correct 99% of the time. Not bad!
Neglecting friction, if the car starts from exactly the same height as the loop, it will reach the top of the loop with 0 speed (conservation of energy). Starting any slight distance above the height of the loop, it will have some non-zero kinetic energy at the top of the loop and will continue through.
Why is that not correct?
Conservation of energy holds, of course, but it does not allow you to predict the height that the car will reach. Remember that the track affects the car's direction.
An analogy: I roll a ball down a frictionless hill of height "h". At the bottom of the hill is a ski jump which shoots the ball into the air. While it's true that
if the ball flies to a height "h" it will get there with 0 speed, you can't know if it will get there without looking at the details of the ramp. (In fact for any angle other than straight up, it won't get there.)
Since the car is traveling
underneath the track as it goes through the loop, at any point that the track ceases to provide a normal force the car will leave the track and become a projectile.
Consider the forces on the car at the top of the loop (
underneath the track!): mg (down) and any normal force (N) also down. If the car is still on the track with some speed V, then its acceleration is V
2/R downward. Thus to have the normal force just go to 0 will require: mg = mV
2/R
From this you can conclude the the KE of the car must be:
mV
2/2 = mgR/2
This is the
minimum KE that the car must have to just maintain contact with the track at the top of the loop.