Find the Speed of a Freight Car When All the Sand is Gone

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A freight car with an initial mass M and a mass of sand m experiences a constant horizontal force F while sand flows out at a constant rate. The challenge is to determine the speed of the freight car once all the sand has been expelled. The correct approach involves recognizing that the mass decreases linearly over time, leading to a time equation m(t) = m0 - kt, where k is the rate of sand loss. The momentum equation must account for the changing mass and can be expressed as F = dp/dt = m(dv/dt) + v(dm/dt). Understanding these relationships allows for the derivation of the freight car's final speed after all the sand is gone.
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Homework Statement


A freight car of mass M contains a mass of sand m. At t=0, a constant horizontal force F is applied in the direction of rolling and at the same time a port in the bottom is opened to et the sand flow out at tconstant rate dm/dt. Find the speed of the freight car when all the sand is gone. Assume the car is at rest t=0

The Attempt at a Solution


P_t=Mv(t)+{m_0}-t{{dm}\over{dt}}

I was trying to solve m_0-t(dm/dt)=0

such that I know the t when all the sand is gone

but I can't solve it.

as it turns out to be

\int {{dt}\over{t}}=\int {{dm}\over{m_0}}

it doesn't make sense at all when t=o! (undefined for In0)

also, the equation of the momentum still has two unknowns for one equation, (even I take dp/dt, I still not sure about d^2/dt(x))

Thanks for your reading!
 
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You're solving for the time when the mass runs out in the wrong way. Maybe once you get that you'll be back on track. You know that the mass is draining at a constant speed

dm/dt=-k(kg/s)

gives

m(t)=m0-kt

want to know when mass is 0

m(t)=0 => m0=kt

so t_(mass=0)=m0/k

check dimensions to see if they are okay kg/(kg/s) = s (check!)

What is P_t supposed to represent?

Let me give you another little bit of help
F = \frac{dp}{dt} = m\frac{dv}{dt} + v\frac{dm}{dt}

you know dm/dt, so now you'll have a differential equation for v that you should be able solve. Of course, your final solution will be an analytic one given that you don't know the rate or the force, but you do know they are constant and so you don't have to worry about F(t) or k(t)!
 
Thanks!
I got this:
v(t')=\frac{\dot{P}}{\dot{m}}
is this correct?
 
Mindscrape said:
Let me give you another little bit of help
F = \frac{dp}{dt} = m\frac{dv}{dt} + v\frac{dm}{dt}

Take care, the total mass is conserved, F=dp/dt refers to the whole system of mass, the spilt sand included. The cart changes momentum due to expelled mass only when that mass has some velocity u relative to the cart. The equation

F = \frac{dp}{dt} = m\frac{dv}{dt} + u\frac{dm}{dt}

is valid, and u=0 in this case, so F=m(t)a.

ehild
 
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