Non-uniform circular motion problem

AI Thread Summary
A 200g ball on a 55-cm string is swung in a vertical circle and breaks when parallel to the ground, reaching a height of 600 cm above the floor. The ball's initial height is 200 cm, and it has a vertical displacement of 0.4 m before reaching its maximum height. The tangential velocity just before the string breaks is calculated to be 2.8 m/s, leading to a centripetal acceleration of 14.25 m/s². The centripetal force is determined to be 2.85 N, but the discussion highlights the need to consider the vertical component of tension that balances gravity. The thread concludes with the user successfully resolving the problem and expressing gratitude for the assistance received.
PEToronto
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Homework Statement
A 200g ball on a 55-cm-long string is swung in a vertical circle about a point 200 cm above the floor. The string suddenly breaks when it is parallel to the ground and the ball is moving upward. The ball reaches a height 600 cm above the floor. What was the tension in the string an instant before it broke?

Given variables:
initial height: 0.2 m
final height: 0.6 m
radius: 0.55 m
mass of ball: 0.2 kg
gravity: -9.8 m/s^2

The attempt at a solution
My answer: The ball is rotating around a point that is 200 cm (0.2 m) above the ground, and snaps off when the string is parallel to the ground- i.e. when the ball is the same height as the center-point of its rotation. It reaches a height of 0.6 m or 600 cm, with a total vertical displacement of (0.6-0.2) m, or 0.4 m, upward. During this displacement of 0.4 m, it has a negative acceleration of 9.8 m/s^2 due to gravity. Using this information, and assuming that the velocity at maximum height is equal to zero, I can use the following equation to figure out the tangential velocity at the instant the ball broke off the string:

Vf^2 = Vi^2 + 2a(y2-y1)
=> 0^2 = Vi^2 + 2(-9.8)(0.6-0.2)
=> 0 = Vi^2 + 2(-9.8)(0.4)
=> -Vi^2 = -7.84
=> Vi = sqrt(7.84) = 2.8

Now I know that the tangential velocity of the ball the instant before it broke off the string was 2.8 m/s upward.

Since centripetal acceleration is "velocity squared over radius", and radius is 55 cm or 0.55 m, so

ac = v^2 / r
=> ac = (2.8)^2 / (0.55) = 14.25

With an acceleration of 14.25 m/s^2 toward the center, the force toward the center should be mass times acceleration, and the mass of the ball is 0.2 kg so

Fc = ac * m
=> 14.25 * 0.2 = 2.85

So the tension on the string should be 2.85 N.

Where did I go wrong?
Did I neglect some vertical component of tension that counteracts gravity while the ball is still attached to the string?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
The conversion of cm to m involves a factor of 100, not 1000 !

Apart from that: my compliments for a very clear posting !

And: welcome to PF, PET :)
 
Last edited:
I would try using conservation of energy and see if that gets you the right answer..
 
Oops...
Thank you so much!
One oversight that gave me a week of stress!
 
I got the answer, so I'm going re-title the thread as "Solved:..."
Thank you BvU and Newton!
 
c from centum, Latin for 100. You'll never forget any more... century, centurion, dollarcent, eurocent, and so on and so forth :)
 
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