Will the cart make it through the sand pile and at what speed will it exit?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on a 380 g cart moving at 0.850 m/s that encounters a pile of sand, with participants analyzing whether it will pass through and at what speed. The initial kinetic energy of the cart is calculated to be 0.137 J, and the work done on the cart by the sand is determined by the area under a force versus position graph. After accounting for the work done, the updated kinetic energy is found to be 0.097 J, leading to a calculated exit speed of approximately 0.715 m/s. Participants emphasize that as long as the cart retains kinetic energy after passing through the sand, it will continue to move. The overall conclusion is that the cart will roll through the sand pile and exit with a reduced speed.
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Homework Statement



A 380 g cart is rolling along a straight track with velocity 0.850i m/s at x = 0. A student holds a magnet in front of the cart to temporarily pull forward on it, and then the cart runs into a dusting of sand that turns into a small pile. These effects are represented quantitatively by the graph of the x component of the net force on the cart as a function of position in the figure below.
p7-34.gif

(a) Will the cart roll all the way through the pile of sand? Explain how you can tell.

(b) If so, find the speed at which it exits at x = 7.00 cm. If not, what maximum x coordinate does it reach?

Homework Equations



W= (F)(d)cos(theta)
W= \int F dx
KE= 1/2(m)(v)2


The Attempt at a Solution


I no that it does roll all the way through the pile of sand, but I am not sure why. Can someone please explain why.

To do the second part, what I did was use the kinetic energy formula above, and set the kinetic energy to the work involved. I found the amount of work done by finding the area under the curve of the graph, and adding each of the areas. For the work, i got:
W= \int F dx
W= (2)(1) +1/2(4)(3=)= 8 Ncm --> .08 Nm
Then I set the kinetic energy equal to work
W=KE
.08= .5(.380kg)v2
v= .65 m/s

I know this is wrong, so can someone help me please!
 
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jessedevin said:

Homework Statement



A 380 g cart is rolling along a straight track with velocity 0.850i m/s at x = 0. A student holds a magnet in front of the cart to temporarily pull forward on it, and then the cart runs into a dusting of sand that turns into a small pile. These effects are represented quantitatively by the graph of the x component of the net force on the cart as a function of position in the figure below.
p7-34.gif

(a) Will the cart roll all the way through the pile of sand? Explain how you can tell.

(b) If so, find the speed at which it exits at x = 7.00 cm. If not, what maximum x coordinate does it reach?

Homework Equations



W= (F)(d)cos(theta)
W= \int F dx
KE= 1/2(m)(v)2

The Attempt at a Solution


I no that it does roll all the way through the pile of sand, but I am not sure why. Can someone please explain why.

To do the second part, what I did was use the kinetic energy formula above, and set the kinetic energy to the work involved. I found the amount of work done by finding the area under the curve of the graph, and adding each of the areas. For the work, i got:
W= \int F dx
W= (2)(1) +1/2(4)(3=)= 8 Ncm --> .08 Nm
Then I set the kinetic energy equal to work
W=KE
.08= .5(.380kg)v2
v= .65 m/s

I know this is wrong, so can someone help me please!

What is the initial KE of the cart at x=0?
Then what does each block of area on the graph represent?
Looks to me like each square represents 1*(.01)N-m = .01N-m

As the cart moves then area above the line is added to the Initial KE, area below is subtracted.

The velocity at any point then is given by converting the KE to mv2/2
 
LowlyPion said:
What is the initial KE of the cart at x=0?
Then what does each block of area on the graph represent?
Looks to me like each square represents 1*(.01)N-m = .01N-m

As the cart moves then area above the line is added to the Initial KE, area below is subtracted.

The velocity at any point then is given by converting the KE to mv2/2

Well I first have to ask does the work equal the kinetic energy of the cart?

The initial KE f the cart is:
KE= .5mv2= .5(.38)(.850)2= .137 J
Okay, so now if I use this KE and add it with the KE i got from the graph, which is -.04, I get .097 J.
Then I use the KE formula again, so
.097=.5(.380)v2
v=.715 m/s
So that's right, i think, but can you explain to me why the cart roll all the way through the pile of sand?
 
jessedevin said:
Well I first have to ask does the work equal the kinetic energy of the cart?

The initial KE f the cart is:
KE= .5mv2= .5(.38)(.850)2= .137 J
Okay, so now if I use this KE and add it with the KE i got from the graph, which is -.04, I get .097 J.
Then I use the KE formula again, so
.097=.5(.380)v2
v=.715 m/s
So that's right, i think, but can you explain to me why the cart roll all the way through the pile of sand?

If it gets to the other side and still has kinetic energy left over what else is it going to do?
 
LowlyPion said:
If it gets to the other side and still has kinetic energy left over what else is it going to do?

lol thanks...
 
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