Tension in vertical circular motion

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the tension in a vertical circular motion scenario involving a 3.25 kg mass on a 0.8 m chain at 20 rpm. Key formulas for tension at different points in the circular path are provided, including adjustments for gravitational forces. Participants debate whether the object maintains a constant velocity and consider the implications of conservation of energy on the system's dynamics. Calculated tensions at various points yield values of -20.384 N at the top, -11.83 N at 43°, and 43.32 N at the bottom, with discussions on the feasibility of maintaining constant speed using a chain. The complexity of the problem is noted, particularly regarding the assumptions made about the motion and the wording of the question.
joel amos
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Homework Statement


If you are spinning an object of mass 3.25 kg on a 0.8 m long chain at 20 rpm (vertical cirular motion), a) what is the tension at the top b) 43° from the top and c) at the bottom?

Homework Equations


String tension: T = Fc - mg cosθ
Tension at top: T = (mv^2/r) - mg
Tension at bottom: T = mv^2/r + mg
Average velocity: v = r × RPM × 0.10472

The Attempt at a Solution


I've found the average velocity given the rpm, which is 1.58 m/s. I have all of the tension formulas that I need. The only problem is that I don't know how to find velocity for a given point on the circular path.
Or...should I just assume that the object is being spun at a constant velocity?
 
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joel amos said:

Homework Statement


If you are spinning an object of mass 3.25 kg on a 0.8 m long chain at 20 rpm (vertical cirular motion), a) what is the tension at the top b) 43° from the top and c) at the bottom?

Homework Equations


String tension: T = Fc - mg cosθ
Tension at top: T = (mv^2/r) - mg
Tension at bottom: T = mv^2/r + mg
Average velocity: v = r × RPM × 0.10472

The Attempt at a Solution


I've found the average velocity given the rpm, which is 1.58 m/s. I have all of the tension formulas that I need. The only problem is that I don't know how to find velocity for a given point on the circular path.
Or...should I just assume that the object is being spun at a constant velocity?
The rpm is given as a constant. The radius is constant, so is the speed. ehild
 
It does not have to be a constant velocity does it?
I think that has to go by context - it could well be that you are supposed to do all this with the constant average speed.

[ehild will probably tell me off for this ...]
... but don't you have conservation of energy to give you some limits on what v can be at the top - given the rpm? i.e. there is a minimum speed it has to be going to stay on a circular path ... but if it goes too fast at the top (slowest part of the trajectory?) then it will complete a circle in less than the 3 seconds needed for 20rpm.

(A constant rpm may imply a constant angular velocity or it could imply that you have 20 cycles in each minute - i.e. it is an average.
I think this is a judgement call.)

aside:
"##v = r \times RPM \times 0.10472##" is better written as :
##v=r\omega_{[rpm]}\pi/30## ... says you know what the numbers mean.
(It sounds pedantic but this sort of thing is worth marks.)
 
Yeah, I guess I'll just assume that velocity is constant.
Now for part b) T = Fc - (3.25 kg)(9.8m/s/s) cos(43)
How do I find centripetal force in this situation?
 
joel amos said:
Yeah, I guess I'll just assume that velocity is constant.
Now for part b) T = Fc - (3.25 kg)(9.8m/s/s) cos(43)
How do I find centripetal force in this situation?

How do you get the centripetal force in general?

ehild
 
Simon Bridge said:
It does not have to be a constant velocity does it?
I think that has to go by context - it could well be that you are supposed to do all this with the constant average speed.

[ehild will probably tell me off for this ...]
... but don't you have conservation of energy to give you some limits on what v can be at the top - given the rpm?

It would be a nice problem to find the speed along the circle assuming conservation of energy, so the object makes a certain revolutions per minute.
The problem does not say that the object spins by itself. There can be some external torque to make it spin with uniform angular velocity.

ehild
 
Last edited:
ehild said:
There can be some external torque to make it spin with uniform angular velocity.
ehild

Exactly
 
ehild said:
How do you get the centripetal force in general?
ehild

Yeah, it was a stupid question: Fc = (mv^2)/r
 
joel amos said:
Yeah, it was a stupid question: Fc = (mv^2)/r

Exactly :smile:

ehild
 
  • #10
I got tension at top to be -20.384 N, at 43° to be -11.83 N, and at bottom to be 43.32 N. Does this look good?
 
  • #11
joel amos said:
I got tension at top to be -20.384 N, at 43° to be -11.83 N, and at bottom to be 43.32 N. Does this look good?
You don't really need the -signs.
As for the answers, generally speaking, tension is always greater at the bottom of a rotation (I think) due to gravitational potential energy being converted into kinetic energy - judging from this, I would say your answers are right.
 
  • #12
But is it possible to spin that object with a chain at so low rpm? Will it not fall on your head?

ehild
 
  • #13
ehild said:
It would be a nice problem to find the speed along the circle assuming conservation of energy, so the object makes a certain revolutions per minute.
The problem does not say that the object spins by itself. There can be some external torque to make it spin with uniform angular velocity.

ehild
It does turn it into a "how do you handle the un-spoken assumptions?" problem, yes.
 
  • #14
I got tension at top to be -20.384 N, at 43° to be -11.83 N, and at bottom to be 43.32 N. Does this look good?
Well, that means push instead of pull except the bottom point. Can a chain push? Or will that object fall on your head?
But if the object is fixed to a rod, it looks correct.

ehild
 
  • #15
Pretty tough to spin an object at constant speed in a vertical circle using a chain. I mean this is not a ferris wheel where a constant speed can be maintained with an external torque. I believe with a chain you have to move your hand in some sort of elliptical path to maintain constant speed throughout. Poorly worded question if you ask me.
 
  • #16
PhanthomJay said:
Pretty tough to spin an object at constant speed in a vertical circle using a chain. I mean this is not a ferris wheel where a constant speed can be maintained with an external torque. I believe with a chain you have to move your hand in some sort of elliptical path to maintain constant speed throughout. Poorly worded question if you ask me.

I agree.

ehild
 
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