Frictionless Roller Coaster Problem

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on a frictionless roller coaster problem involving a 12,000 kg car starting from rest. The key issues are calculating the total energy, speed at point B, and the force and work needed to stop the car at point E. The main challenge is the absence of a stopping distance value in the problem, which is necessary for calculating force but not for work. Participants confirm that the stopping distance is essential for part c) but not for part d), leading to the conclusion that the problem likely contains an error. The conversation highlights the importance of having complete data for accurate calculations in physics problems.
danrochester
Messages
9
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


Consider the frictionless roller coaster shown. (Diagram attached)

If a 12000 kg car starts at rest from Point A, calculate:

a) the total energy of the system
b) the speed of the car at point B
c) the force that must be applied to bring it to a stop at point E
d) the work done to bring it to a stop at point E

Homework Equations



for a): E(total) = mgh
for b): E(total) = mgh + 1/2mv^2 (rearrange to solve for v)

The Attempt at a Solution



The problem I'm having is with parts c) and d): in the book it looks like there is supposed to be a measurement at point E, but there isn't any value given. Do I need this to calculate an answer? (I haven't done anything on "momentum" yet, so I am working with gravitational potential energy, force, work and energy).

Thanks for any assistance
-Dan
 

Attachments

  • diagramL5Q20.JPG
    diagramL5Q20.JPG
    7 KB · Views: 818
Physics news on Phys.org
Do you know a relation between force applied and work done? I can't see your diagram, but at E you should have some stopping distance given. Use it to find the force.
 
you don't expect us to just give you the answer do you? this is so easy!
 
Irid said:
Do you know a relation between force applied and work done? I can't see your diagram, but at E you should have some stopping distance given. Use it to find the force.

I know the relationship. As I said in my post, there is no value given for the stopping distance, but it looks like there was supposed to be one and it was left out. That was actually my whole question; do I need this value, and is this a text error as I suspected.

beocom6000yello said:
you don't expect us to just give you the answer do you? this is so easy!

I didn't ask for the answer, just whether or not I needed a value for stopping distance. You didn't even read the question.
 
Well, using dimension analysis, you can determine whether you need some quantity or not. If you wish to combine energy (joules) and force (Newtons) you MUST have some quantity which is expressed in meters. If it is not given, maybe you're supposed to assume some value or smth.
 
danrochester said:
The problem I'm having is with parts c) and d): in the book it looks like there is supposed to be a measurement at point E, but there isn't any value given. Do I need this to calculate an answer?
Did you post the complete problem exactly as given?

If I understand the problem, you'll need the stopping distance to answer c), but not to answer d).
 
Last edited:
Doc Al said:
Did you post the complete problem exactly as given?

If I understand the problem, you'll need the stopping distance to answer c), but not to answer d).

The problem as posted is verbatim from the book, so it looks like there is an error in the book as I suspected. If I had the distance it would be a simple problem, for c) F=W/d, and the work would equal the total energy of the system. And again, for part d), the work required to bring the train to a stop is equal to the energy in the system.

Sorry about the confusion everyone, I do know how to do these questions! But a book error is a book error...I guess that's just the way it goes.

Thanks a lot
-Dan
 
Back
Top