Measure of spring in system with roller

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the elongation of a spring in a system involving two masses and an Atwood machine setup. The user initially calculates the spring constant and attempts to derive the total elongation, arriving at a final measurement of 0.175 meters. There is confusion regarding the forces acting on the masses and the spring, particularly whether to include spring force (Fs) and tension (Ft) in their diagrams. Participants clarify that the spring does not contribute to the acceleration of mass 1 and that the forces should be represented clearly but not excessively. The conversation concludes with reassurance about the correctness of the calculations and the approach to drawing the forces.
Aireve
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Homework Statement


m1= 0,05 kg, m2= 0,03 kg, mass of spring is omitted. We look at movement after spring stopped vibrate. How long does the spring measure during the movement if not stretched spring measure 0,1 meter and if we use force 0,1N elongation measures 0,02 meter.
(sorry, English isn't my main language, I've never learn scientific words so I'm not quite sure if my translation is right)

I know the answer is 0,174 meter.

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


m1*a = m1*g - Ft (Ft is thread tension)
m2*a = Ft + Fs - m2*g

0,1 = k*0,02
k=5

Don't know what next and if it's even right.
 

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Hym, I can solve problems when there is no spring. That spring is real problem since I don't know how to mark forces at that device. Is Fs=Fg? My friend tried to solve that without Fs but I'm not sure...
 
Aireve said:
Is Fs=Fg? My friend tried to solve that without Fs but I'm not sure...
Why would Fs be Fg?
Is the spring applying force in either direction? what does Newton's third law tell us?
 
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Jamison Lahman said:
Why would Fs be Fg?
Is the spring applying force in either direction? what does Newton's third law tell us?

I'm not sure but aren't second mass applying force? Can't Fg be force of action and Fs force of reaction?
 
Aireve said:
I'm not sure but aren't second mass applying force? Can't Fg be force of action and Fs force of reaction?
Is there any effect from mass 1?
 
Jamison Lahman said:
Is there any effect from mass 1?

Well, because of mass 1 that system is moving to the left.
 
Aireve said:
Well, because of mass 1 that system is moving to the left.
I think you have the right idea. Translation may be a little off. Because of mass 1, the force on mass 2 does not equal the the force of gravity on mass 2.
With that being said, because the spring is without mass it does not contribute to the acceleration of mass 1. The tension in the string, Ft , is therefore also the same force acting on the spring, Fs .
 
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Jamison Lahman said:
I think you have the right idea. Translation may be a little off. Because of mass 1, the force on mass 2 does not equal the the force of gravity on mass 2.
With that being said, because the spring is without mass it does not contribute to the acceleration of mass 1. The tension in the string, Ft , is therefore also the same force acting on the spring, Fs .

So...
0,1 = k*0,02
k=5

m1*a = m1*g - Ft
m2*a = Ft - m2*g

a(m1 + m2) = g(m1 - m2)
a = 0,2/0,08 = 2,5 m/s^2

Ft = m2(a + g) = 0,03*12,5 = 0,375 = Fs

0,375 = 5*x
x = 0,075 m

x+0,1 = 0,175 m = 17,5 cm

Is it correct?
 
  • #10
Aireve said:
So...
x+0,1 = 0,175 m = 17,5 cm

Is it correct?
Looks like it
 
  • #11
Jamison Lahman said:
Looks like it

Ok, thank you!
But can I have one more question? How should I draw those forces at that picture? Should I draw Fs and Ft or only one of them? They should "touch" mass 2 or spring?
 
  • #12
Aireve said:
Ok, thank you!
But can I have one more question? How should I draw those forces at that picture? Should I draw Fs and Ft or only one of them? They should "touch" mass 2 or spring?
You could explicitly show all of the forces (so that the spring looks like the green to the side):
Tension_figure.svg

But I think that would be messy and overly complicated. I personally would only draw forces on objects with mass.
 
  • #13
Jamison Lahman said:
You could explicitly show all of the forces (so that the spring looks like the green to the side):
Tension_figure.svg

But I think that would be messy and overly complicated. I personally would only draw forces on objects with mass.

Right, I don't think I have to do that much.
To be 100% sure, it's ok?
 

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  • #14
Looks fine to me
 
  • #15
Ok, thank you. :)
 
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