Inertia, frictionless pulley, and a weight

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around a physics problem involving a frictionless pulley and a falling stone. The user initially calculated the kinetic energy of the pulley and the stone but struggled to find the distance the stone must fall to achieve a specific kinetic energy of 4.5J. After some back-and-forth calculations and confusion regarding acceleration, the user successfully applied the conservation of mechanical energy principle to determine that the stone must fall 67.3 cm. The conversation highlights the importance of using energy conservation rather than focusing solely on velocities and accelerations for solving such problems. Ultimately, the user resolved the issue with guidance on applying mechanical energy concepts.
jaredmt
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Homework Statement


A frictionless pulley has the shape of a uniform sold disk of mass 2.5 kg and radius .2m. A 1.5kg stone is attached to a very light wire that is wrapped around the rim of the pulley, and the system is released from rest. (a) How far must the stone fall so that the pulley has 4.5J of kinetic energy? (b) What percent of the total kinetic energy does the pulley have?

Homework Equations


I for solid disk: I = (1/2)(MR^2)

The Attempt at a Solution



first i plugged in this equation:
K = (1/2)IW^2 + (1/2)MV^2
i replaced W with V/r
K = (1/2)I(V/r)^2 + (1/2)MV^2
first i had to find I:
using formula above: I = (1/2)(2.5)(.2^2) = .05 kgm^2
then i plugged in everything to find final velocity :
4.5J = (1/2)(.05kgm^2)(V/.2m)^2 + (1/2)(1.5kg)V^2
then i solved for V and got V = 1.8 m/s

ok now I am not entirely sure what to do... i need the distance that the rock drops. but to do that i need to find the acceleration.
radial acceleration is V^2/r = 16.2 rad/s^2

then i tried V^2 = Vo^2 + 2(a)(X-Xo)
Vo=0 and Xo=0 so it becomes:
V^2 = 2(a)(x)

i have value for V. i know I am supposed to be able to figure out A so i can solve for x. but I am not sure if I am converting from radial acceleration to regular acceleration correctly because i keep getting the wrong answer.

i thought this was the formula for that:
a^2 = Arad^2 + Atan^2
and Atan = Arad(r) right? because I am doing something wrong... idk what it is
the answer is supposed to be 67.3 cm
 
Last edited:
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jaredmt said:
first i plugged in this equation:
K = (1/2)IW^2 + (1/2)MV^2
i replaced W with V/r
K = (1/2)I(V/r)^2 + (1/2)MV^2
first i had to find I:
using formula above: I = (1/2)(2.5)(.2^2) = .05 kgm^2
then i plugged in everything to find final velocity :
4.5J = (1/2)(.05kgm^2)(V/.2m)^2 + (1/2)(1.5kg)V^2
then i solved for V and got V = 1.8 m/s
4.5J is the KE of the pulley, not the total KE.

Figure out the total KE. Then ask where that energy came from. (Hint: Conservation of mechanical energy.)
 
thanks for the help. i got part (b) which is Kpulley/Ktotal = 4.5/9.89 x 100 = 45.5% :)

but I am still stuck on part (a). since i got the second part right i know that my velocity is right now. the W = 13.4 rad/s and V = Wr = 13.4(.2) = 2.68 m/s.
this time i tried solving the distance by finding the change in the angle:
Arad = (W^2)(r) = 36 rad/s^2
W^2 = 2(Arad)(feta)
13.4^2 = 2(36)(feta)
feta = 2.494 rads
this doesn't come out to 67.3m :(

edit: SWEET! i figured it out cus of ur mechanical energy hint!
i did:
Ktotal = mgh
9.89 = 1.5(9.8)h
h = .673m = 67.3 cm

thanks a lot!
 
Last edited:
I can't quite follow what you're doing. In any case, instead of messing around with speeds, use conservation of energy. Compare the mechancial energy of the system before and after the stone falls.
 
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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