Conservation of momentum/mass when dropping an object on a spring.

Click For Summary

Homework Help Overview

The problem involves a butcher dropping a steak onto a pan suspended from a spring, leading to an inelastic collision and subsequent vertical simple harmonic motion. The focus is on the conservation of momentum and energy during the collision.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the energy calculations before and after the collision, questioning the conservation of energy in inelastic collisions. They explore the implications of energy loss and its conversion into other forms, such as heat and potential energy in the spring.

Discussion Status

Some participants have provided guidance on the nature of inelastic collisions and the associated energy transformations. Multiple interpretations of the energy calculations and their implications are being explored, with no explicit consensus reached regarding the correctness of the answer key.

Contextual Notes

Participants are grappling with the apparent discrepancy between calculated kinetic energy before and after the collision, as well as the energy values suggested by the answer key. The discussion is framed within the constraints of homework rules, emphasizing the need for understanding rather than simply obtaining answers.

JustinLiang
Messages
79
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


A spring of negligible mass and force constant k=400 is hung vertically and a 0.2kg pan is suspended from its lower end. A butcher drops a 2.2kg steak onto the pan from a height of 0.4m. The steak makes a totally inelastic collision with the pan and sets the system into vertical SHM. What is the speed of the pan and steak immediately after the collision?

Homework Equations


PE=mgh
KE=mv^2/2
mv=mv
E(total energy in spring)=kA^2/2

The Attempt at a Solution


First I found out the energy produced from dropping the steak 0.4m:
PE=mgh
=2.2kg(9.8)(0.4m)
=8.624J

Then I used this to find the speed of the steak before the collision:
PE=KE
8.624J=(2.2kg)(v^2)/2
v=2.8m/s

When the steak goes into the pan by conservation of momentum we have:
mv=mv
(2.2kg)(2.8m/s)=(2.4kg)(v)
v=2.56666666m/s

My problem: However if I plug 2.566666m/s back into the KE equation I do not get 8.624J, instead I get 7.095J which means that the energy is not conserved? Do you guys know why? If I have 7.095J as the energy and I plug it into the E(total energy in spring) equation I do not get the right amplitude, instead plugging in 8.624J will get me the right answer.
HERE IS A SIMPLER PROBLEM
I found the same problem when solving for the final velocity of a block m=0.992kg when a bullet with v=280m/s and m=0.008kg strikes it and embeds itself into it.

By conservation of momentum:
(0.008)(280)=(1kg)(v)
v=2.24m/s

Where initially the KE in the bullet initially is
KE=0.008(280)^2/2=313.6J

But the KE after the collission is
KE=1kg(2.25m/s)^2/2=2.5088J

So clearly the energy is not conserved? I am confused.
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
JustinLiang said:
When the steak goes into the pan by conservation of momentum we have:
mv=mv
(2.2kg)(2.8m/s)=(2.4kg)(v)
v=2.56666666m/s

My problem: However if I plug 2.566666m/s back into the KE equation I do not get 8.624J, instead I get 7.095J which means that the energy is not conserved? Do you guys know why? If I have 7.095J as the energy and I plug it into the E(total energy in spring) equation I do not get the right amplitude, instead plugging in 8.624J will get me the right answer.

You have done it correctly, and it is the correct answer. So you are right that energy is not conserved during the collision. That's why the collision is called inelastic.
 
Any energy 'lost' has just been converted into heat and sound during the collision :)
 
BruceW said:
You have done it correctly, and it is the correct answer. So you are right that energy is not conserved during the collision. That's why the collision is called inelastic.

If that's the case shouldn't 7J get me the correct amplitude? The answer suggests I use 8.6J, but this energy is not conserved?
 
7J should get you the right amplitude. Maybe the answer book is incorrect?
 
hmm, actually maybe the lost KE is turned into PE in the spring (so that although the collision is fully inelastic, energy is conserved).
 
BruceW said:
hmm, actually maybe the lost KE is turned into PE in the spring (so that although the collision is fully inelastic, energy is conserved).

Yeah it is totally inelastic so all the energy would be conserved. But how do you explain the differences in the energy before collision 8.624J and after collision 7.905J (I initially typed out the wrong values).
 
I just tried a different calculation:

If all the energy is conserved then:
PE=KE(with both masses)
8.624J=(2.4kg)(v^2)/2
v=2.68m/s

This answer tells us all the PE becomes KE in the combined mass. However the answer key has a v=2.6m/s so I don't think this is right. Maybe the answer key is wrong...
 
I'm guessing the answer key is wrong. It does happen on occasion.
 
  • #10
Okay thanks!
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 20 ·
Replies
20
Views
4K
Replies
24
Views
4K
  • · Replies 22 ·
Replies
22
Views
2K
Replies
7
Views
3K
  • · Replies 7 ·
Replies
7
Views
4K
Replies
21
Views
3K
  • · Replies 12 ·
Replies
12
Views
3K
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
991