Conservation of momentum on a swing

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the conservation of momentum in the context of a child swinging on a swing, exploring how motion is initiated and maintained in a closed system involving gravity. Participants also consider broader implications of momentum in human movement, such as lifting a finger.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant questions how a child starts moving on a swing and whether air resistance plays a role in initiating motion.
  • Another participant reflects on the source of momentum when moving parts of the body, such as lifting a finger.
  • A response suggests that momentum comes from muscle movement rather than air, but acknowledges the complexity of muscle contractions.
  • Some participants argue that the effect of air is negligible and that motion is possible due to changes in body shape and mass distribution.
  • One participant explains that leaning and shifting mass on a swing generates forces that facilitate movement, emphasizing the role of torque and angular momentum.
  • Another participant challenges the idea of muscles providing momentum, suggesting that momentum must come from the Earth to avoid violating conservation laws.
  • One participant emphasizes that momentum is balanced and that the law does not imply that motion is conserved.
  • A later reply provides a detailed explanation of how gravitational force is converted into linear motion when swinging, referencing the need for a force diagram.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express multiple competing views on the source of momentum and the mechanics of swinging. The discussion remains unresolved, with differing interpretations of how momentum conservation applies in these scenarios.

Contextual Notes

Some claims depend on assumptions about closed systems and the definitions of momentum and force. The discussion includes complex interactions that are not fully resolved, particularly regarding muscle dynamics and external forces.

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I was thinking the other day about how conservation of momentum works in terms of a closed system consisting of a child and a swing and gravity. How does the child start moving on the swing? Does he need to push against the air to start going? Where does he extract the momentum from? If he does push against the air, does that mean that a child cannot start swinging from rest in a vacuum? This has been in the back of my mind for a couple of days, but nothing good has popped into my head.
 
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This also got me thinking about conservation of momentum in terms of the human body in general. For example, when I lift my finger, where am I taking momentum from? And where is it going once I stop moving my finger?
 
to answer your first question, the momentum comes from your muscles; when someone swings it has little to do with the air; the swinger moves his or her legs and or arms and the momentum is transferred to the swing; for your second answer you have to look at each individual muscle contraction and it's very complicated and i don't understand it well enough to explain it but here's a link that explains it well http://cstl-csm.semo.edu/trautwein/BS113Fall2003/Sliding Filament.ppt
 
I believe the effect of the air is negligible. (A swing would work on the Moon.) The motion is possible because the child is changing shape. When you move your finger, the whole Earth moves the other way to compensate. Of course, your finger is a tiny fraction of the mass of the Earth, so it moves much much farther. It's safe to say that the motion of the planet would not be measurable.
 
On a swing, it's trivial to start moving: if you start to lean your body then your centre of mass goes in one direction and the swing pivots in the other. More importantly, by shifting your mass (relative to the seat) at the right time, that acceleration can change the tension through the swing chain (think of lowering your effective weight as you swing up, and increasing it as you swing down).

As for the second Q: pick up a brick, go stand on a scale, then jerk the brick up and down.

I think you're misunderstanding: momentum is always balanced, the law does not say motion is conserved.
 
Getting momentum from your muscles makes no sense. Your muscles themselves are also gaining momentum, which means you'd be getting momentum out of nothing, thus violating conservation of momentum.

Taking momentum from the Earth makes sense in my head though. The brick analogy helped a lot.

cesiumfrog: I don't know what you mean by motion is conserved. I was only thinking of this problem in terms of conservation of momentum and closed systems.
 
On a swing, the initial linear force is generated indirectly by exerting a torque. For example, leaning back and pulling on the chain creates a "backwards" torque (back on chain forwards on seat), which momentarily diverts the chain backwards at an angle from the support bar and raises the center of mass somewhat. This results in a forward linear force, sin(angle) times tension (weight). This can be repeated until the point where shifting mass towards and away from the support bar will also work (via angular momentum) due to the swining motion.

For a good example of the radial shifting of mass once swining here is a video of swinging rings where the guys can reach bar level in about 3 swings from back in the 1970's:

http://jeffareid.net/real/quad.wmv

similar but longer videos:
http://jeffareid.net/real/gym1.wmv
http://jeffareid.net/real/gym2.wmv
 
Last edited:
The only meaningful answer above is given by Jeff Reid. What you are doing on a swing is converting gravitational (downward) force to linear (circular) force. When you lean back in the swing, you are transferring part of the downward gravitational force into horizontal motion because of the swing chain. (You have to work out the force diagram -- physics 101.)
 

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