Fining the force constant of a spring

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around determining the force constant of a spring when a mass is placed on it, specifically involving a 9.09 kg mass compressing the spring by 4.18 cm. The subject area includes concepts from mechanics and Hooke's Law.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Conceptual clarification

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the application of Hooke's Law and the relationship between force, mass, and displacement. There are questions regarding unit conversions and potential typos in the problem statement or answer. Some participants suggest that the average force might be relevant to the calculations.

Discussion Status

The discussion is active, with various interpretations of the problem being explored. Some participants have provided calculations and questioned the correctness of the original poster's approach, while others have pointed out potential errors in unit conversion and assumptions about force.

Contextual Notes

There is mention of a possible typo in the problem or answer, and participants are considering the implications of using different units for mass and displacement. The discussion includes a focus on the nature of forces involved in the scenario.

Crbeach
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When a 9.09kg mass is placed on top of a vertical spring, the spring compresses 4.18 cm. Find the force constant of the spring.

Okay I know the formula for a spring is F=-kx
So k=mg/x
converting the cm to m I get 4.18cm = 0.0418m

So I plug in my numbers
k=(9.09kg)(9.81m/s^2)/ 0.0418
but that gives me 2133 which is not the answer.

What am I doing wrong?
 
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when I type it in my calculator I get:
(9,09 * 9,81) / (4,18^(-2)) = 1 558,06458

If that is the right answer than you just made a typo, if it's not then I also don't know:P
 
Include the unit of the spring constant.

ehild
 
The answer is 2.13 kg*m/s^2 / m

The only way I can see to get that answer is to make the cm into decimeters
4.18 cm = 41.8 dec
That gives me 2.13 but that wouldn't work for the unit kg*m/s^2 / m
 
Last edited:
4.18 cm is 0.418 dm...

Your answer k=2133 N/m is correct if the mass is 9.09 kg. If the mass is 9.09 g (gram) k would be 2.13 N/m.

ehild
 
Ok so there is a typo in the book, either in the question or in the answer.
Thank you very much. Its nice to know I was doing the problem correctly
 
I'm guessing that you were off by a factor of 2. In the Hooke's Law equation (F = -kx) where force is generated by gravity, F represents the AVERAGE force, not the peak force. Force is not constant as the the spring is compressed from its relaxed length to its new equilibrium point with the weight sitting on it.

The problem assumes that the spring starts from the relaxed length with zero force. The force at the maximum compression is the peak force (mg). Since k is a constant, the relationship between force and distance is linear. So, the average force is 1/2 of the peak force (1/2 * m * g).
 
Dansar said:
I'm guessing that you were off by a factor of 2. In the Hooke's Law equation (F = -kx) where force is generated by gravity, F represents the AVERAGE force, not the peak force.

That is wrong.
F=-kx is the force the spring exerts on the block when its length differs by x from the relaxed length, not an "average" one. The block is stationary, so the force of gravity is canceled by the spring force, mg-kx=0.

ehild
 

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