Explaining a Conceptual Physics Problem with Free Body Diagrams

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around the physics of a mass dropped onto a spring and the application of free body diagrams to analyze the forces and energy involved. It highlights confusion over the spring constant calculation, specifically why the equation mg = kx is inappropriate at maximum compression since the system is not in equilibrium, despite the mass being momentarily at rest. Participants clarify that at the point of maximum compression, the total mechanical energy should be equated as mgh = 1/2kx², where h includes both the drop height and the spring compression. The conversation emphasizes the need to account for kinetic and potential energy throughout the mass's motion, particularly before and after it impacts the spring. Ultimately, the resolution points to a misunderstanding in the original solution regarding the forces acting on the mass during compression.
cowmoo32
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I'm reviewing some problems from a few months ago and I remember getting hung on this before. A mass is dropped from a height h above a spring. I am given the deflection of the spring when the mass stops moving momentarily. The spring constant in the solution is given by mg/x. I understand how that works if the mass is placed on a spring, but why is the extra force of the mass falling not accounted for? Why am I incorrect in saying that all of the kinetic energy of the mass falling is converted into potential energy for the spring? I tried the latter and came up with a close answer, but not the same as the solution. The mass is momentarily at rest. This isn't after the spring has damped out and stopped moving. The end goal of the problem is to find the velocity of the mass at some smaller x once the spring starts pushing it back up during the first oscillation.

Drawing a free body diagram of the mass just above the spring and after it hits, F = mg for both of them, but in the second one the spring is pushing back. I know F=ma=kx and a is constant, but if a mass is dropped on a spring, the spring will compress more than it would if the mass was gently placed on top.

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Initially the mass is not moving, so it has only PE. When the mass is falling before it hits the spring, it has a combination of PE and KE. When the mass is falling after hitting the spring, it has a combination of PE and KE, and the spring also has a combination of PE and KE. When the mass stops at the bottom of its travel momentarily, it has only PE, and the spring only has PE.

So what can you say about the sums of PE and KE at any particular moment in this sequence? Does that help answer your question?
 


I agree with you (cowmoo32). k should have been determined by setting v = 0 in the energy equation.
 


berkeman said:
Initially the mass is not moving, so it has only PE. When the mass is falling before it hits the spring, it has a combination of PE and KE. When the mass is falling after hitting the spring, it has a combination of PE and KE, and the spring also has a combination of PE and KE. When the mass stops at the bottom of its travel momentarily, it has only PE, and the spring only has PE.

So what can you say about the sums of PE and KE at any particular moment in this sequence? Does that help answer your question?
The sums should be the same, correct? When the mass has fallen the initial h + deflection, all of the energy in the system is now PEspring, at least that makes sense in my head. Why, then, do I get an incorrect value when I set mg(h + delta) = 1/2kx2?

haruspex said:
I agree with you (cowmoo32). k should have been determined by setting v = 0 in the energy equation.
Someone in my class clarified why F=mg=kx, but I still don't see why what I said above doesn't yield the right value for k.
 


cowmoo32 said:
Someone in my class clarified why F=mg=kx.
Then please explain it to me:confused:. When mg=kx there will be no acceleration, but it won't be at rest unless all the KE has been dissipated.
 


I just re-read the question, and it asks about a point in the spring compression before it reaches full compression. That means that there are all PEheight+PEspring+KEmass. Did you account for that in your work?
 


berkeman said:
I just re-read the question, and it asks about a point in the spring compression before it reaches full compression.
Yes, but before that you are required to deduce the spring constant from the compression extent when the mass is momentarily at rest. This is the bit that seems wrong in the embedded text. It says mg = kx there, which is wrong.
 


I emailed my professor and the solution is wrong. You cannot say F=mg=kx because the system is not in equilibrium. I was correct in saying that at the point of maximum compression the energy of the system is mgh=1/2kx2 where h is the distance the mass fell + the compression.

The steps in the red box in the solution you sent are not correct. I think the mistake they made is that they used the sum of the forces = 0 at the maximum compression: kx - mg = 0. The problem is that even though the velocity is zero, the acceleration is not zero at this point. It's not in equilibrium.
 
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