Solving Hooke's Law Problem: Find Position of Block

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The problem involves a block attached to a spring on a frictionless surface, where a constant force of 3.0 N stretches the spring. The initial calculations using Hooke's Law suggest the block's position is 0.06 m, but the correct position is actually 0.12 m. The error arises from misunderstanding that the net force being zero indicates the block stops, rather than directly calculating the position. Instead of focusing solely on force, the discussion emphasizes using work and energy principles to find the correct position. The work done by the applied force equals the potential energy stored in the spring, leading to the accurate position of the block.
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A block attached to a spring (which is attached to a wall) lies on a horizontal frictionless surface, and the spring constant is 50 N/m. Initially, the spring is at its relaxed length and the block is stationary at position x = 0. Then an applied force with a constant magnitude of 3.0 N pulls the block in the positive direction of the x axis, stretching the spring until the block stops. When that stopping point is reached, what is the position of the block?

I tried using Hooke's Law:

3.0 = 50x

x = 3.0/50

x = 0.06 m

However, when I checked my answer, it said x = 0.12 m.

Does anyone know what I did wrong? Thank you!
 
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Hooke's law tells you what force the spring exerts for any given extension. You found the extension that gives a restoring force equal to the applied force. But that just means the net force is zero at that point, not that it stops.

Hint: Think work and energy, not force.
 
The work done by the force=the potential energy of the block.
 
Thank you for your help!
 
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