artriant said:
I also found
this post, according to it:
If we happen to know the total force applied on the circle, which is the entire centrifugal force for all the mass let's name that Fc(total)
F(tension)=[2*Fc(total)]/π
I don't think this post is modeling what you want.
The total mass of the wire is 1729,82~Kg
No it's not. According to the OP, the rope has a mass per meter of 5.506 kg/m (ignoring the ridiculous number of digits in the original figure)
Since the rope is 50 m long, then its mass is m = 5.506 kg/m × 50 m = 275.3 kg
If i plug that on a
centrifugal calculator with r=50m and 3rpm, i get a
Centrifugal force = 8536,35 N = Fc(total)
And then by using the
formula in bold i get a tension of 5434,4~ N
Is that approach accurate? That formula is rly simple and handy, can anyone confirm?
I think that centrifugal calculator assumes that a concentrated mass M is being swung at a radius R at a given number of RPM, so any tension you obtain will be erroneous.
By analyzing this problem from first principles, we can obtain the following:
Rope L = 50 m
Angular velocity ω = 3 RPM = 2π rad/rev. × 3 rev./min. × (1/60) min./s = 6π/60 = π/10 rad/s
The density of iron is
ρ = 7874 kg/m
3
and the diameter of the rope is
d = 1.125 in = 1.125 in. × 25.4 mm/in. = 28.575 mm
The area of the rope's cross section is
A = πd
2 /4 = π × 28.575
2 / 4 = 641.3 mm
2
A = 641.3 mm
2 × 10
-6 m
2/mm
2 = 6.413 × 10
-4 m
2
The volume of a piece of rope, V = A × L
The mass of this piece, m = ρV = ρAL
Since there is no gravity, then the tensile force created on each small piece of rope with mass dm will be proportional to its distance r from the end of the rope and the square of the angular velocity, ω, since the centripetal acceleration is defined
a = ω
2r m/s
2
A small section of rope with length dr will have a mass
dm = 5.05 kg/m * dr
since L = dr and ρ = 7874 kg/m
3 and A = 6.413 × 10
-4 m
2
then
dm = 5.05 dr
F = ma = m ⋅ ω
2r
So the centrifugal force acting on
dm is
dF = a × dm = ω
2 r × 5.05 dr
dF = a × dm = 5.05*π
2/100 * r dr
dF = .04984 * r dr
The total tensile force on the rope at the end about which it is being swung is
##F = \int_0^{50 m} 0.04984\, r ⋅ dr ##
F = 0.04984 * (50)
2/2
F = 0.04984 * 2500 / 2 = 623 N