Find Your Center of Mass Solution: How Far Can You Move on a Floating Board?

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To determine how far a person can move on a floating board without changing the center of mass, the combined center of mass of the person and board must remain constant. The board is 6 meters long, with the person starting at the east side and the board's mass being 80 kg. Since the board is not uniform, its center of mass is not at the midpoint, requiring the use of the center of mass formula to calculate the maximum distance the person can walk westward. The person’s movement causes the board to shift east, and the goal is to find the maximum distance they can move before the center of mass shifts past a reference point 5 meters to the west. Solving this involves setting the initial and final positions of the center of mass equal and rearranging the equation accordingly.
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Part of my problem for physics is finding how far a person can move along a floating board. The board is not acted on by any outside forces so the center of mass before the person starts moving and the center of mass afterwards stays the same. Their is no air friction on the board. The Person starts on the east side. The board is 6 meters long and i know the mass of the person is 70kg and the mass of the board is 8 kg. However, the board is not uniform so its center of mass is not in the center. The person must walk westward but as he wals the board moves east. The question is how far can he move from his original position to a piece of string hanging down 5 meters to the west of him.

Really need help on this problem as I've been thinking bout if for about a half hour now and its due tom. Thanks for the time and any help is appreciated.
 
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Sorry, in the previous post i meant the mass of the board was 80 kg
 


To solve this problem, we need to first find the center of mass of the person and the board combined. Since the board is not uniform, we cannot simply use the midpoint of the board as the center of mass. Instead, we will need to use the formula for center of mass, which is:

Center of mass = (m1x1 + m2x2 + ... + mnxn) / (m1 + m2 + ... + mn)

Where m1, m2, ..., mn are the masses of the individual components and x1, x2, ..., xn are their respective positions from a chosen reference point.

In this case, we have two components - the person (m1 = 70kg) and the board (m2 = 8kg). Let's choose the east side of the board as our reference point (x = 0). The person starts at x = 0 and we want to find the maximum distance they can move to the west (x < 0) before the center of mass of the system moves past the string hanging 5 meters to the west.

To find the center of mass, we need to know the position of the board's center of mass (x2) and the person's position (x1). We can use the formula above to solve for x2:

x2 = (m1x1 + m2x2) / (m1 + m2)

Since the person and the board are initially at rest, the center of mass of the system will also be at rest. This means that the center of mass before and after the person moves must be the same. Therefore, we can set the initial and final positions of the center of mass equal to each other:

(m1x1 + m2x2) / (m1 + m2) = (m1x1' + m2x2') / (m1 + m2)

Where x1' and x2' are the final positions of the person and the board, respectively. We can rearrange this equation to solve for x1':

x1' = (m1x1 + m2x2) / (m1 + m2) - (m2x2') / (m1 + m2)

Now, we can plug in the known values:

x1' = (70kg * 0m + 8kg * x2) / (70kg +
 
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