Calculating Velocity & Displacement of a Dropped Object

AI Thread Summary
A 1 Kg object dropped from a height of 2000 meters will reach a velocity of 200 m/s just before landing on a thick bed of pillows, calculated using energy conservation principles. The total mechanical energy is conserved, combining gravitational potential energy and kinetic energy. To find how far the object compresses the pillows, the kinetic energy just before impact is set equal to the potential energy stored in the spring-like pillows. The correct equation for the spring energy is 1/2 kx^2, not 1/2 mv^2. This approach allows for determining the distance the object travels into the pillow stack before coming to a stop.
Kaxa2000
Messages
71
Reaction score
0
A 1 Kg object is dropped from rest from a helicopter at an altitude
of 2000 meters. What is the velocity of the object just before it lands upon a thick bed of pillows? The top of the pillow stack is at zero altitude. If the restoring force
constant (spring constant) of the stack of pillows is 1 N/m, how far into the stack will the
object travel before it comes to a full stop? Neglect air resistance.
 
Physics news on Phys.org


So you can start by calculating the final velocity. There are two ways to go here: one would be to use forces (Newton's laws, etc); and the other is using energies (conversion from potential to kinetic energy, etc).

Since the second part of the question includes a spring, I suggest you are supposed to use energies here?

So there are two relevant points: the point where the object is dropped and the point 2000 meters below it where it hits the pillows. As you know, the total energy
Etotal = Epotential + Ekinetic
is conserved (i.e. the same at these two points), where Epotential is the gravitational energy.
Can you give me the formulas for the two quantities on the right hand side and express them in given values and unknowns?
 


Would it be

mgh + 1/2mv2

(1kg)(9.8m/s2)(2000m) + (1/2)(1kg)(v)2
 


After you solve for v you get 200 m/s.

Do you set the KE = to the spring equation after that to find distance it goes into pillows?

1/2mv^2 = kX?
 


almost--energy in a spring is of the same form=1/2kx^2 As written above you are equating energy and force.
 
TL;DR Summary: I came across this question from a Sri Lankan A-level textbook. Question - An ice cube with a length of 10 cm is immersed in water at 0 °C. An observer observes the ice cube from the water, and it seems to be 7.75 cm long. If the refractive index of water is 4/3, find the height of the ice cube immersed in the water. I could not understand how the apparent height of the ice cube in the water depends on the height of the ice cube immersed in the water. Does anyone have an...
Thread 'Variable mass system : water sprayed into a moving container'
Starting with the mass considerations #m(t)# is mass of water #M_{c}# mass of container and #M(t)# mass of total system $$M(t) = M_{C} + m(t)$$ $$\Rightarrow \frac{dM(t)}{dt} = \frac{dm(t)}{dt}$$ $$P_i = Mv + u \, dm$$ $$P_f = (M + dm)(v + dv)$$ $$\Delta P = M \, dv + (v - u) \, dm$$ $$F = \frac{dP}{dt} = M \frac{dv}{dt} + (v - u) \frac{dm}{dt}$$ $$F = u \frac{dm}{dt} = \rho A u^2$$ from conservation of momentum , the cannon recoils with the same force which it applies. $$\quad \frac{dm}{dt}...
Back
Top