Lagrangian Mechanics - Pulley System

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Homework Statement


Here's a little diagram I whipped up in paint:
http://img83.imageshack.us/img83/7625/diagramcj4.th.jpg

Sorry about my sucky art skills.

The wiggly line is a spring with spring constant mk and natural length d. The actual length of the spring is y. The two masses to the left have mass m, the mass on the right has mass 2m. The springs are attached by a light string which doesn't slip over the light pulley, which has a radius R which is free to rotate. The angle theta is the angle by which the pulley has rotated since the initial conditions. The red line indicates the position of all the masses at the initial conditions. The initial conditions are y=0, t=0, \theta=0 and everything is at rest.

a) Write down the vertical displacement of each of the three masses from their initial positions in terms of theta and y.

b) Show that the Lagrangian describing the system is up to a constant given by:
L = 2mR^{2}\theta'^{2} -mR\theta'y' + m/2 y'^{2} + mgy - (mk/2)(y-d)^{2}

where ' indicates a first derivative with respect to time- can't do the normal dots it seems.

Homework Equations



L = T - V

The Attempt at a Solution


Well for a) I think for the mass on the right its just -R\theta
for the mass on the top left its R\theta
for the mass on the bottom left its -\theta - y

I assume that's right- correct me if I'm wrong!

for b) I can't get what I'm supposed to.
I do not get the -mR\theta'y' term. Here's my thinking:

For the kinetic energy:
1/2mv^{2} for each mass where v is the time derivative of their vertical displacement in a). This gives 2mR^{2}\theta'^{2} + m/2 y'^{2}

For the potential energy: -mgy as the total loss in GPE is due to the mass on the bottom left going down by y, the other two masses cancel each other out. The last term is correct, just the potential energy of the spring.

So, my question: Where does the -mR\theta'y' term come from?
hopefully this is fairly clear :/
Thanks (again) :D
 
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lol. I'm an idiot. I finally see where its from. This will teach me to skip steps and do too much in my head.

The displacement of the third mass if R\theta + y
The derivative of this wrt time is R\theta ' + y'
This squared is R^{2}\theta^{2}' + y'^{2} + 2R\theta'y'

I really feel like an idiot :)
 
To solve this, I first used the units to work out that a= m* a/m, i.e. t=z/λ. This would allow you to determine the time duration within an interval section by section and then add this to the previous ones to obtain the age of the respective layer. However, this would require a constant thickness per year for each interval. However, since this is most likely not the case, my next consideration was that the age must be the integral of a 1/λ(z) function, which I cannot model.
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