Firing a bullet into a bock suspended by a string Help

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the initial velocity of a bullet fired into a block suspended by a string, with a focus on energy conservation and momentum principles. The correct initial velocity is approximately 491 m/s, derived from the conservation of momentum and energy equations. A participant mistakenly calculated 34 m/s by incorrectly applying energy conservation without accounting for momentum loss during the impact. Clarifications were made regarding the proper use of equations, emphasizing the need to apply momentum conservation to find the bullet's speed before impact. The thread concludes with participants acknowledging the correct methodology and resolving the confusion.
StonedPhysicist
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Hey guys apparently the answer to this is 491 m/s, but i keep getting 34m/s by using a method whereby i find out the height reached by the block then using kinetic energy to potential energy... doesn't seem to work tho! Please help!

A 50.0 g bullet is fired into a stationary 10.0 kg block suspended on a light inextensible wire of length 1.3 m. If the bullet becomes fully embedded in the block, and the bullet-block system reaches a maximum angle of 40.0◦, find the initial velocity of the bullet.
 
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##\delta h## is given by 1.3-1.3cos(40), and ##g\delta h = \frac{1}{2} v_i^2## (conservation of energy, where ##v_i## is the initial velocity of the block+bullet). The total momentum before and after the collision stays the same as well, so you should be able to figure out why the velocity of the bullet had a magnitude of approximately 491 m/s before the collision.
 
Show your work, and it will make it easier to see what's going on.
 
PWiz said:
##\delta h## is given by 1.3-1.3cos(40), and ##g\delta h = \frac{1}{2} v_i^2## (conservation of energy, where ##v_i## is the initial velocity of the block+bullet). The total momentum before and after the collision stays the same as well, so you should be able to figure out why the velocity of the bullet had a magnitude of approximately 491 m/s before the collision.
I am pretty sure i did this method, and ended up with a result of 34m/s, not sure that method can work for some reason
 
@StonedPhysicist The method worked just fine for me. Why don't you show your working? As Bystander said, it would make things much easier.
 
using v=√((2(m+M)gh)/m) , where m=0.05 kg M=10kg g=9.81 and h = 0.3...m i get 34m/s?
 
Why are you taking a square root for m as well?
 
PWiz said:
Why are you taking a square root for m as well?
i am just rearranging (m+M)gh=1/2 mv2
 
The kinetic energy should be given by ##\frac{1}{2} (M+m) v^2##. The gain in PE of the block+bullet equals to the KE the block+bullet possessed right after collision. The equation resolves to what I previously provided. So applying conservation of momentum, we get ##mv_1=Mv_2## , so ##v_1=\frac{M}{m} \sqrt{2g\delta h}## .
 
  • #10
PWiz said:
The kinetic energy should be given by ##\frac{1}{2} (M+m) v^2##. The gain in PE of the block+bullet equals to the KE the block+bullet possessed right after collision. The equation resolves to what I previously provided. So applying conservation of momentum, we get ##mv_1=Mv_2## , so ##v_1=\frac{M}{m} \sqrt{2g\delta h}## .
ah I see now! thankyou!
 
  • #11
StonedPhysicist said:
I am pretty sure i did this method
No you didn't. As PWiz wrote, you use the energy equation to find the speed of block+bullet just after impact. There is work loss in the impact so you cannot use energy to relate it back to the speed of the bullet before impact. You have to use conservation of momentum for that.

Edit: I see you figured it out as I was typing.
 
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