Oscilations: Bullet collides with wood block on spring

AI Thread Summary
A bullet of mass 6.20g traveling at 485m/s embeds itself in a 1.73kg wooden block on a frictionless surface, attached to a spring with a spring constant of 79.0N/m. The period of the system is calculated to be approximately 0.931 seconds. The maximum velocity of the block immediately after the collision is determined using conservation of momentum, resulting in a velocity of 1.73m/s. The amplitude of the oscillation is found to be 0.256m, and the total energy before the bullet strikes is solely the kinetic energy of the bullet. After resolving the calculations, the user successfully determines the total energy of the bullet-block-spring system post-collision.
nickb145
Messages
68
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



A 6.20g bullet traveling at 485m/s embeds itself in a 1.73kg wooden block at rest on a frictionless surface. The block is attached to a spring with k = 79.0N/m

A)Find the Period
B)Find the Amplitude
C)Find the totla energy of the bullet+block+spring system before the bullet enters the block.
D)Find the total energy of the bullet+block+spring system after the bullet enters the block.

Homework Equations


T=2∏\sqrt{}k/m or T=2∏ω
K=1/2mv
P=1/2kx
X=Acos(ωt)
Vx,max=ωA

The Attempt at a Solution

Ok so i found the Time T=2πsqrt(1.7362/79)== .931s

Now I'm literally stumped with finding the amplitude. I've tried Vmax=ωA and a few other ways and can't understand what I'm doing incorrectly.
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
What's wrong with ##V_{max} = \omega A##?
 
voko said:
What's wrong with ##V_{max} = \omega A##?

I'm not really sure. I used it because i assume that 485 IS the max velocity
 
That was the velocity before impact. What the velocity of the block with the embedded bullet immediately after impact?
 
voko said:
That was the velocity before impact. What the velocity of the block with the embedded bullet immediately after impact?

I think using the conservation of momentum will work.

M1V1 + M2V2 = (M1 + M2)V3
.0062(485)+1.73(0)=(1.7362)V3 V=1.73m/s (that is a massive drop)
 
Yep.
 
voko said:
Yep.

Interesting.
SO i just take the difference between Vmax and Vmin?
Vmax 485=Sqrt(79/.0062)A A=4.296
Vmin 1.731=-sqrt(79/1.7362)A= -.256

Which i now have is 4.039m. Which mastering physics tells me is incorrect.
 
The velocity the bullet had before impact has no significance for oscillations. Important is only the velocity of the block. What is the max velocity of the block after impact?
 
voko said:
The velocity the bullet had before impact has no significance for oscillations. Important is only the velocity of the block. What is the max velocity of the block after impact?

1.73m/s?
 
  • #10
Yes.
 
  • #11
voko said:
Yes.

So now the Amplitude is .256m using Vmax=sqrt(k/m)A
 
  • #12
Looks good.
 
  • Like
Likes 1 person
  • #13
Now for the energy before the bullet strikes.
Before the bullet enters the wood block i just have the kinetic energy of the bullet. Because i assume the spring is at x=0 and that just cancels out the potential energy.

Now for after the collision I used the X=Acos(ωt) to get X. I got .2544 by adding the two masses, used the time and amplitude i originally had.


1/2(1.7362)(1.73)^2+1/2(79)(.2544) I tried this but getting something incorrect. Is it because of what i did to the kinetic energy?
 
  • #14
Never mind i figured it out. Thank you very much for the assistance!
 
Back
Top