Solve Momentum Puzzle: Recoiling Cannon

  • Thread starter Thread starter Awwnutz
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Cannon
Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
1 reply · 2K views
Awwnutz
Messages
42
Reaction score
0
http://img266.imageshack.us/img266/3747/cannonlr0.gif

A circus cannon, which has a mass M = 5000 kg, is tilted at θ = 50°. When it shoots a projectile at v0 = 40 m/s with respect to the cannon, the cannon recoils along a horizontal track at vcannon = 0.5 m/s with respect to the ground.

a) At what angle to the horizontal does the projectile move with respect to the ground?

b) What is the mass of the projectile?

c) The cannon is now lowered to shoot horizontally. It fires the same projectile at the same speed relative to the cannon. With what speed does the cannon now recoil with respect to the ground?



Relative Equations:
Conservation of momentum



I already figured out part a. The velocity of the projectile with respect to the ground is the velocity of the projectile with respect to the cannon + the velocity of the cannon with respect to the ground. I found the Velocity of the projectile with respect to the ground to 40.5 m/s. Then i did a ratio to find the angle with respect to the ground.
(40m/s)/(50 degrees)=(40.5m/s)/(theta with respect to the ground)
Theta equals 50.625 degrees.

Its part b that I'm having trouble with. I know that the momentum of the cannon must be equal and opposite to that of the projectile in the x-direction. My equation looked like this:
-(5000kg)(-.05m/s) = Mp(40.5cos(50.625))
From there i found the mass of the projectile to be 65.9444 kg, but this is not right. What am I overlooking. I've went over this 3 times now and I can't seem to find my mistake.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Physics news on Phys.org
I figured it out by looking at other questions just like this. My resultant in the x direction was wrong. I just did 40cos(50.625) when i needed to do 40cos(50) - 0.5. The rest was pretty easy after that.