Conservation of energy of a sliding block

AI Thread Summary
A block sliding down a frictionless hemisphere will leave the surface when the centripetal force equals the gravitational force acting on it. The initial calculations suggested that the block would leave at a height of 0.85m, but this was incorrect due to neglecting the gravitational component acting in the radial direction. The correct approach involves using the angle of the block's position to determine the forces, leading to the realization that the normal force must be considered. After adjusting the calculations to account for the angle, the correct height was determined. The discussion highlights the importance of understanding the dynamics of forces acting on an object in circular motion.
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Homework Statement


A small block starts at rest on top of a frictionless hemisphere (like an igloo) of radius 1.7m. Then the block slides down from the top. At what height above the ground (in m) is the block moving fast enough that it leaves the surface of the hemisphere?


Homework Equations



mv^2/r = a

mgh = PE

.5mv^2 = KE



The Attempt at a Solution



I think that the thing will leave the surface when the centripetal force is greater that the force of gravity, because the force of gravity is the only force supplying the centripetal force. So,
(mv^2)/r > mg

so v>sqrt(rg)

The velocity after falling a height h is
v=sqrt(2gh)

sqrt(2gh)>sqrt(rg)

2gh>rg
2h>r
h>r/2

so it would have to fall 1.7/2 = .85m


.85m is not the correct answer.

The only other thing I can think of is that the force supplied by gravtiy varies based on the angle that the normal force between the object and the cube changes.
 
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anap40 said:

Homework Statement


A small block starts at rest on top of a frictionless hemisphere (like an igloo) of radius 1.7m. Then the block slides down from the top. At what height above the ground (in m) is the block moving fast enough that it leaves the surface of the hemisphere?


Homework Equations



mv^2/r = a

mgh = PE

.5mv^2 = KE



The Attempt at a Solution



I think that the thing will leave the surface when the centripetal force is greater that the force of gravity, because the force of gravity is the only force supplying the centripetal force. So,
(mv^2)/r > mg

so v>sqrt(rg)

The velocity after falling a height h is
v=sqrt(2gh)

sqrt(2gh)>sqrt(rg)

2gh>rg
2h>r
h>r/2

so it would have to fall 1.7/2 = .85m


.85m is not the correct answer.

The only other thing I can think of is that the force supplied by gravtiy varies based on the angle that the normal force between the object and the cube changes.
the centripetal force is provided by the algebraic net sum of the component of the block's weight in the radial direction and the normal force in that direction between the block and the curved surface. When the normal force is 0, there is no longer enough of a radial gravitational component to keep the object moving in a circle. You have neglected that component (gsintheta) in your calculations.
 
Thanks for the reply.

Is this diagram correct?
http://img172.imageshack.us/img172/475/33347115yw1.png

So the equation should be centripetal force + normal force = cos(theta)mg?
 
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The appropriate equation would be net normal force = mg costheta - mv2/r, where theta is the angle with respect to the vertical and the radius extending to the contact point of the mass with the sphere. The diagram is more or less correct.
 
OK, thanks. The equation you gave is just a rearrangement of mine, but I think that I was using the angle between the ground and the radius extending out to the contact point of the mass. If i did it that way I guess I would just have to use sin.

I got the correct answer now, thank you.
 
anap40 said:
OK, thanks. The equation you gave is just a rearrangement of mine, but I think that I was using the angle between the ground and the radius extending out to the contact point of the mass. If i did it that way I guess I would just have to use sin.

I got the correct answer now, thank you.
Yes, if one uses the angle with respect to horizontal, then one would use sin rather than cos.
 
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