Sphere describing a circle, find tension

AI Thread Summary
A sphere with a mass of 3 kg moves in a horizontal circle at a speed of 1.2 m/s, with a string length of 800 mm. The angle theta is calculated to be 24.2°, and the tension in the wire is determined to be 32.3 N. The discussion emphasizes the importance of balancing centripetal acceleration with weight and tension, noting that there is no tangential acceleration since the speed is constant. Participants clarify that the centripetal acceleration is purely horizontal, and the calculations should reflect the correct components of forces involved. Understanding the geometry of the motion is crucial for accurate analysis.
Apprentice123
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A sphere of 3 kg describe a circle with a horizontal speed of 1,2 m/s. Knowing that L = 800 mm, determine (a) the angle theta (b) the tension in the wire

Answer:
(a) 24,2°
(b) 32,3 N


I find 2 equations

ZFn = m . an
T - Pcos(theta) = m . v^2/p

ZFt = m . at
Psin(theta) = m . at

As calculated at? (tangential acceleration)
 

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Apprentice123 said:
… I find 2 equations

ZFn = m . an
T - Pcos(theta) = m . v^2/p

ZFt = m . at
Psin(theta) = m . at

As calculated at? (tangential acceleration)

Hi Apprentice123! :smile:

(I can't see the diagram yet, but I assume this is a string of length 800 mm with a sphere on the end rotating at a steady speed)

i] there is no tangential acceleration … the acceleration is purely radial (centripetal)

ii] you must balance the centripetal acceleration the weight and the tension, by taking components both horizontally and vertically …

try again! :smile:
 


tiny-tim said:
Hi Apprentice123! :smile:

(I can't see the diagram yet, but I assume this is a string of length 800 mm with a sphere on the end rotating at a steady speed)

i] there is no tangential acceleration … the acceleration is purely radial (centripetal)

ii] you must balance the centripetal acceleration the weight and the tension, by taking components both horizontally and vertically …

try again! :smile:

The two formulas that I found are:

ZFn = m . an
T - Pcos(theta) = m . v^2/p

ZFt = m . at
Psin(theta) = m . dv/dt
 
Apprentice123 said:
ZFt = m . at
Psin(theta) = m . dv/dt

Apprentice123, there are no tangential forces, and no acceleration! :rolleyes:

v is constant!

You need vertical components, not tangential ones.

What is the vertical acceleration, and what are the vertical forces? :smile:
ZFn = m . an
T - Pcos(theta) = m . v^2/p

(btw, I've been wondering for ages … in what language does P stand for weight? :confused: :wink:)

(oh, and have a theta for copying: θ :wink:)

T needs a θ also, and you need to write p in terms of L.
 


tiny-tim said:
Apprentice123, there are no tangential forces, and no acceleration! :rolleyes:

v is constant!

You need vertical components, not tangential ones.

What is the vertical acceleration, and what are the vertical forces? :smile:


(btw, I've been wondering for ages … in what language does P stand for weight? :confused: :wink:)

(oh, and have a theta for copying: θ :wink:)

T needs a θ also, and you need to write p in terms of L.



Correct ?

ZFn = m.an
T - P = m . v^2/L
T = 34,83 N

ZFt = m.at
at = 0
Tcos(theta) - P = 0
theta = 30,9°
 


Apprentice123 said:
Correct ?

... = m . v^2/L

The centripetal acceleration is m*v2/r.

But r in this case is not L. It is the radius about the point that it rotates, and that point is not where the string is tied.
 
Hi Apprentice123! :wink:

Now I see where you got this from …
Apprentice123 said:
ZFn = m . an
T - Pcos(theta) = m . v^2/p

Yes, that would be correct if the centripetal acceleration were along the string (the P has cosθ, and the T has no θ).

But, as LowlyPion :smile: points out, it's horizontal.

Centripetal acceleration has nothing to do with physics, it's just geometry

never mind why it's going in a circle (in this case, because of the string) …

all that matters is the shape of the circle, and the speed …

it's a horizontal circle, so the centripetal acceleration is also horizontal. :smile:
 


tiny-tim said:
Hi Apprentice123! :wink:

Now I see where you got this from …


Yes, that would be correct if the centripetal acceleration were along the string (the P has cosθ, and the T has no θ).

But, as LowlyPion :smile: points out, it's horizontal.

Centripetal acceleration has nothing to do with physics, it's just geometry

never mind why it's going in a circle (in this case, because of the string) …

all that matters is the shape of the circle, and the speed …

it's a horizontal circle, so the centripetal acceleration is also horizontal. :smile:

Ok. Thanks
 
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