Finding the Mass of a Pole Vault Athlete

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on calculating the maximum height a pole vault athlete can reach based on their initial velocity and mass. It highlights that using the conservation of energy formula results in the mass canceling out, making it impossible to determine the mass solely from the given parameters. The original problem states the athlete's mass as 30 kg, but the user mistakenly sought to calculate it based on velocity and height. Clarification reveals that the height achieved does not depend on mass if the initial velocity is constant. Ultimately, additional information would be needed to deduce the mass from the motion parameters.
Bunny-chan
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Homework Statement


An olympic athlete with ~30 kg mass is participating in pole vaulting. The athlete runs and, at the moment of the jump, he has a velocity of ~10 m/s. Calculate the maximum height he can reach.

To solve these kinds of problems, we can just convert all the kinetic energy the athlete develops during the motion to gravitational potential energy, and find the point which it has zero kinetic energy. But what I'm having trouble with is to calculate the mass of the athlete given initial velocity and the maximum height.

2. Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


Evidently, If I try to use the conservation of energy formula for the athlete \frac{1}{2}mV_0^2 = mghthen the masses will just cancel each other and I won't go anywhere. Thanks for the help.
 
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Doesn't the problem statement supply the mass? What does the problem ask you to find?
 
gneill said:
Doesn't the problem statement supply the mass? What does the problem ask you to find?
It asks me to find the mass based on the running velocity (10m/s) and the maximum height (5.2m/s). Do you think that maybe it was mistyped?
 
Bunny-chan said:
It asks me to find the mass based on the running velocity (10m/s) and the maximum height (5.2m/s). Do you think that maybe it was mistyped?
Are you looking at a different problem than the one you posted? Your problem statement says:
Bunny-chan said:
An olympic athlete with 30 kg mass is participating in pole vaulting. The athlete runs and, at the moment of the jump, he has a velocity of 10 m/s. Calculate the maximum height he can reach.
 
gneill said:
Are you looking at a different problem than the one you posted? Your problem statement says:
Yes, and then I said "But what I'm having trouble with is to calculate the mass of the athlete given initial velocity and the maximum height.". Sorry for the misleading information!
 
I edited the post.
 
If I understand what you are saying, it is not the original problem that you are having difficulty with but a different scenario where you are instead given the initial velocity and maximum height and then wish to deduce the mass?

If that is the case then the answer is that you cannot. Since both the kinetic energy and the gravitational potential energy are directly proportional to the mass, then when they are equated the mass cancels as you've noted. The same height would be achieved no matter what the mass is, so long as it had the same initial velocity.

In order to determine the mass you would need some other information relating the mass to the motion.
 
gneill said:
If I understand what you are saying, it is not the original problem that you are having difficulty with but a different scenario where you are instead given the initial velocity and maximum height and then wish to deduce the mass?

If that is the case then the answer is that you cannot. Since both the kinetic energy and the gravitational potential energy are directly proportional to the mass, then when they are equated the mass cancels as you've noted. The same height would be achieved no matter what the mass is, so long as it had the same initial velocity.

In order to determine the mass you would need some other information relating the mass to the motion.
Thank you very much! That's what I wanted to know.
 
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