Inelastic Collision of a bullet and block

AI Thread Summary
A bullet with a mass of 24 grams and a speed of 540 m/s is fired into a 1.20 kg block of wood at rest, and the problem involves calculating how high the block will rise after the bullet becomes embedded in it. The momentum conservation equation mV = (m + M)V' is used to find the final velocity (V') of the block and bullet system. The kinetic energy equation 1/2mV'^2 = (m + M)gh is then applied to determine the height (h) the block rises. The error in the initial calculations stemmed from incorrectly converting the bullet's mass, which should be 0.024 kg instead of 0.24 kg. Correcting this mistake is crucial for obtaining the accurate height result.
12boone
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Homework Statement


A bullet is fired vertically into a 1.20 kg block of wood at rest directly above it. If the bullet has a mass of 24.0g and a speed of 540 m/s , how high will the block rise after the bullet becomes embedded in it?


Homework Equations



1/2mv^2+mgh=1/2mvf^2+mgh
mv=mvf

The Attempt at a Solution



I know that for this i must use momentum to find the final v which would be

mV=(m+M)V'
then i use that V' to find height

1/2mV'^2=(m+M)gh

I solved this and I got an answer of 413 meters this is wrong. I do not know what I am doing wrong.
 
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12boone said:
mV=(m+M)V'
then i use that V' to find height
Good!

1/2mV'^2=(m+M)gh
Make sure you use "m+M" on both sides. (They cancel, of course.)

If that's not the problem (and I don't think it is), show your calculations, step by step.
 
ok i did that and it is still wrong. i did .5(.240+1.20)(90)^2=(.240+1.20)(9.80)h

i put the left side in the calc. and got 5832=(.240+1.20)(9.80)h then divided the right numbers by the left and my answer is 413.26m which is wrong according to mastering physics.
 
12boone said:
ok i did that and it is still wrong. i did .5(.240+1.20)(90)^2=(.240+1.20)(9.80)h
Show how you calculated that speed.
 
I multiplied .240kg(540m/s) then divided that by (.240+1.2).
 
12boone said:
I multiplied .240kg(540m/s) then divided that by (.240+1.2).
There's the problem. The bullet's mass is 24 grams = 0.024 Kg (not 0.24 Kg).
 
wow thank you!
 
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