How do you find acceleration using Hooke's law?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around applying Hooke's law to determine the acceleration of a cart connected to a spring. The scenario involves a 1.0 kg cart that is initially at rest and is subjected to the force exerted by a spring when stretched by 30 cm and then released. Participants are tasked with calculating the acceleration at two different points: immediately upon release and after the spring has been compressed to 20 cm.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss using the equation F=ma to find acceleration based on the force exerted by the spring. There is a question about the relevance of initial velocity in the calculations, and some participants express confusion regarding the units of measurement and the need for time information.

Discussion Status

Some participants have provided feedback on the calculations, indicating that the results appear correct. However, there is ongoing confusion about the role of initial velocity and the implications of unit consistency in the context of acceleration. The discussion is exploring these uncertainties without reaching a definitive conclusion.

Contextual Notes

Participants are working under the assumption that there is no friction affecting the system. There is also a noted lack of information regarding time, which is causing some participants to reconsider how to incorporate velocity into their calculations.

Sciencelover91
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Homework Statement


Imagine you were to connect your spring from this experiment to a 1.0 kg lab cart. You pull the car back and stretch the spring 30 cm, then release the car from rest, assuming there is no friction.
A) find the acceleration at the instant when the cart is first released.
B) When the spring's stretch has decreased to 20 cm (thus the cart has moved forward 10 cm), calculate the cart's acceleration at this instant.

Homework Equations


I have this equation that I solved for from my lab data: Force of spring = (spring constant 7.5N/M) x (the stretch of the spring s). ----> Fos (force on string) = 7.5 N/m (s)
F=ma

The Attempt at a Solution


a) I know I am given the mass of the cart, initial velocity (0m/s) and the stretch of the string so I tried using f=ma and used Fos = ma.
7.5N/m (.2 m) = (1.0kg) X a
a = 2.25 m/s^2
However I think it's supposed to take into consideration that the initial velocity is zero so I don't know how to apply this without the final velocity.

B) I did force on spring = ma so 7.5(.2m) = 1.0kg x a and got 1.5 m/s^2, I want to know if I did this correctly and if I was supposed to use the fact that it moved 10cm forward.
 
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Your results look fine to me. Remember that it doesn't matter if an object starts out with 0 m/s or 1000000 m/s; any given instantaneous acceleration a = (net F)/m will only tell you how the velocity changes with that time at that instant.
 
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Tallus Bryne said:
Your results look fine to me. Remember that it doesn't matter if an object starts out with 0 m/s or 1000000 m/s; any given instantaneous acceleration a = (net F)/m will only tell you how the velocity changes with that time at that instant.
I am a little confused though because from my work, the units do not work out, I do not have seconds in answer and I am not given any information regarding time (seconds) so I assume I would have to incorporate initial/final velocity into my answer. Because otherwise I would be assuming m/s^2 when my work does not show that so I am not sure how to use velocity in here.
 
Sciencelover91 said:
I am a little confused though because from my work, the units do not work out, I do not have seconds in answer and I am not given any information regarding time (seconds) so I assume I would have to incorporate initial/final velocity into my answer. Because otherwise I would be assuming m/s^2 when my work does not show that so I am not sure how to use velocity in here.
I just remembered what Newtons stood for so the units cancel out, which leaves me with m/s^2 sorry. Thank you!
 

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