How do I find the man's speed when depressing the platform 0.120 m?

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To find the man's speed when he depresses the platform by 0.120 m, the potential energy equation U=mgh is used, along with the spring constant derived from k=2mgh/x². The spring constant k is calculated to be approximately 68055 N/m, which leads to a velocity of 6.06 m/s at that compression. For the second part, using the same k value to determine the maximum distance the man would push the platform when stepping gently yields a displacement of 0.0210 m, which is confirmed to be correct after adjusting for significant figures. The discussion emphasizes the importance of correctly applying energy conservation principles and understanding spring mechanics.
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hello, if anyone can help me figure this out, it will be appreciated.
the problem is the following:
An 80.0-kg man jumps from a height of 2.50 m onto a platform mounted on springs. As the springs compress, he pushes the platform down a maximum distance of 0.240 m below its initial position, and then it rebounds. The platform and springs have negligible mass.
a)What is the man's speed at the instant he depresses the platform 0.120 m?
b)If the man just steps gently onto the platform, what maximum distance would he push it down?

I found the potential energy when the man hits the spring by U=mgh,
i also need the spring constant and this is where i get confused on how to get it.
Do i use F=kx, the F being the weight?and then plug into find w=0.5kx^2, and then finally find v??
I also get confused as to which distances to use on the equations
Any help would be great!
thanks.

[?]
 
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At the point where the spring is fully compressed you've got:
PE_{spring}=mgh

for the second part you've got:
kx=mg
which is also relatively easy to solve.
 
thanks for ur reply NateTG, but still I get confused on how to get the constant k, on the equations u sent, they use x as distance, which distance should i use??
 
Let's find k
mgh=\frac{1}{2}kx^2
so
k=\frac{2mgh}{x^2}
where h is the height the man dropped, and x is the spring displacement.
 
hey thanks!, i got the first part for the velocity ,but the equation that you gave me for the second part, to find the distance as the man steps on the spring kx=mg is not giving me the right answer, is there another way of finding that distance?
 
I get
k=373332 N/m
so I get a displacement of 2cm what do you get?
 
i get for the first part k=68055 N/m, which gave me a velocity
of 6.06 m/s, which is right.
But when i use that same k for the second part, i get 0.0115 m
for the displacement, and it says its wrong.
 
Hmm, do you know what the correct answer is supposed to be? You would get a different equation if you try disregard friction, and solve part 2 with energy.
 
no, i don't know the answer,i put the answer on a website and it tells me wheter I'm right or not. I still have 6 tries left :wink:
I supposed the answer would be smaller than 0.240 m which was the compression when the man jumped, I plugged in yours, 2 cm , 0.02 m , and is also wrong.i'll keep trying with what u said about not using friction and doing it with kinetic, thanks.
 
  • #10
hey, i think they wanted more sig figs, the anwer was 0.0210 m,
i just requested it, because i got the same as you did when i worked it out.
 
  • #11
mgy=1/2kx^2

mgy=1/2kx^2

is all you need for these problems

hold on While I do the calculations
 
  • #12
Worked out

MGY
80*2.5*9.8=1960
1960=1/2K*.254^2
K=68055.55556
Then you can F=-kx
F=-16333.3333

you shoudl be able to solve the rest fairly easily... if i did it right hope i helped in some way
 
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