blueboy499
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Homework Statement
I am confused on how to begin finding the angles (theta) for answering part a?
blueboy499 said:Homework Statement
I am confused on how to begin finding the angles (theta) for answering part a?
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blueboy499 said:In the book, it is given as 5x109 N/M2. But this problem is not out of the book, so it's a bit of a stretch.
jhae2.718 said:If you use Newton's second law, you'll get two scalar equations, and you'll have two unknowns*...
*Assuming the system is in static equilibrium.
blueboy499 said:So then what do you do with those 2 unknowns?
blueboy499 said:The change in the length of the material = ((tensile stress)/(young's modulus))(final length of the material).
But the stress = force/area and since I'm not given the force or the angles or enough other geometric values, how can I solve for this?
blueboy499 said:"w.r.t."?
blueboy499 said:The way I still see it, I still don't have: the force for the F/A = tensile stress, the final length of the rope, and the change in length of the rope. Am I missing something here, or is there some other method we should be going about this?
gneill said:Young's modulus should give you an effective "spring constant" for the rope. Take a look at the Wikipedia article on Young's Modulus, at the section "Force exerted by a stretched or compressed material".
blueboy499 said:Each of those stated equations require knowing the change in length to calculate the force.
blueboy499 said:Thank you for all of your help, but I only just now discovered that the professor changed the problem to include the vertical distance the rope sags after loading and reaching equilibrium. I should be able to figure it out from here. Thanks again! :)