Hooke's Law/SHM Homework: Find Amplitude After Glue Breaks

AI Thread Summary
A 1.50 kg ball and a 2.00 kg ball are glued together and attached to a vertical spring with a force constant of 165 N/m, vibrating with an amplitude of 15.0 cm. When the glue breaks at the lowest position, the problem requires finding the new amplitude of the 2.00 kg ball. Calculations show that the displacement of the spring with both balls attached is 0.2079 m, while the lower ball alone has a new amplitude of 0.239 m after separation. Concerns arise about whether this new amplitude would cause the ball to overshoot and hit a wall, but it is clarified that the spring has a minimum length to prevent this. The discussion emphasizes understanding the equilibrium point and the dynamics of the system post-separation.
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Homework Statement


A 1.50 kg ball and a 2.00 kg ball are glued together with the lighter
one below the heavier one. The upper ball is attached to a vertical ideal
spring of force constant 165 N/m and the system is vibrating vertically with
amplitude 15.0 cm. The glue connecting the balls is old and weak, and it
suddenly comes loose when the balls are at the lowest position in their
motion. Find the amplitude of the vibrations after the lower ball has come loose.

Homework Equations


ΣF=ma
W=mg
Fs=-kx
m1=1.5kg
m2=2kg

The Attempt at a Solution


∑F=ma
-kx1-(m1+m2)g=0
x1=(m1+m2)g/k
x1= .2079m

.15m+x1=.3579m

x2=(m2)g/k
x2=.11879m

.3579m - .11879m = .239m

Even after solving it, I do not really understand what is going on in the problem. Why is x=.2079 with both of them attached, when the amplitude is .15m?
 
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x=.2079 is the displacement of the spring to the equilibrium point before the loosening. We are assuming in both cases that the masses vibrate about the equilibrium point.
 
So, it looks like this?
 

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Yes.
 
Thing is; when x2 = 0.11879m its amplitude is 0.239m. Wouldn't that overshoot into the wall and affect its amplitude?
 
Good point but the assumption is that the spring has some minimum length, at least 0.208m. So your diagram should show this datum point and the wall offset that minimum amount.
 
Kindly see the attached pdf. My attempt to solve it, is in it. I'm wondering if my solution is right. My idea is this: At any point of time, the ball may be assumed to be at an incline which is at an angle of θ(kindly see both the pics in the pdf file). The value of θ will continuously change and so will the value of friction. I'm not able to figure out, why my solution is wrong, if it is wrong .
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