Spring Problem, conservation of energy equation

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on applying the conservation of energy principle to a mass-spring system, specifically to find the speed of a mass at the equilibrium point after being released from rest. The conservation of energy equation is established as KE1 + PE1 = KE2 + PE2, where the potential energy (PE) at the initial position (5.40 cm) is converted to kinetic energy (KE) at the equilibrium point (0 cm). The potential energy is calculated using PE = 1/2kx^2, leading to a total energy of 1.31 J at the initial position. The participants clarify that to find the velocity, one can use the relationship KE = 1/2mv^2 and solve for v. Ultimately, the correct speed at equilibrium is determined to be 1.48 m/s.
smashbrohamme
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Write the conservation of energy equation for this situation and solve it for the speed of the mass as it passes equilibrium.

A horizontal spring attached to a wall has a force constant of 900 N/m. A block of mass 1.20 kg is attached to the spring and oscillates freely on a horizontal, frictionless surface as in the figure below. The initial goal of this problem is to find the velocity at the equilibrium point after the block is released.


The points of interest are where the mass is released from rest (at x = 5.40 cm) and the equilibrium point, x = 0.

x= 5.40 it is 1.31 J
x= 0 it is 0 J.

I am getting suck on write the conservation of energy equation for this situation.
the answer is 1.48 M/S but the only equation I can come up with is 1/2kx^2=1/2mv^2

Nothing is adding up here.
 
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smashbrohamme said:
The points of interest are where the mass is released from rest (at x = 5.40 cm) and the equilibrium point, x = 0.

x= 5.40 it is 1.31 J
x= 0 it is 0 J.
What does 'it' represent?

Note that total energy = KE + PE
 
"it" is energy stored in the spring at those moments.
 
KE+PE = total Energy, but how do I convert energy to a velocity?
 
smashbrohamme said:
"it" is energy stored in the spring at those moments.
Good. So what's the total energy at each moment? (That's where conservation of energy comes in.)
 
I don't quite understand, throw a dog a bone here!
PE=1/2kx^2 so that is energy stored technically.
KE= 1/2mv^2 I can't find the velocity this is where I am stuck.

I am assuming I can take the PE and convert it to KE *some how*

then take the known variables of KE and plug it into KE=1/2mv^2 and solve for v^2.

So I need to figure out how to convert PE into KE.
 
Put a fork in it, this ham is done boys.

I wasn't converting CM to M...so naturally it was making my numbers super high.

Incase anyone comes up with this problem a nice lil formula to use is.


Vf= squareroot (k/m (Xi^2-Xf^2)

in other words you take the Sprint Constant, Divide it by the mass. You then take this number and multiply it by (Xi^2-Xf^2), and square root all of it.
 
Good. But rather than memorize some formula, just think of it as energy conservation:

KE1 + PE1 = KE2 + PE2

Where KE = 1/2mv2 and PE = 1/2kx2.

This way you can solve for whatever you need, no matter what they throw at you.

In this case, things get easy:

Since the mass is released from rest, you know that KE1 = 0.
And since the second point is at the equilibrium position, you know that PE2 = 0.
 
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