Understanding Motion in a Pulley System

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Homework Statement



A smooth ring A of mass m can slide on a fixed horizontal rod. A string tied to the ring passes over a fixed pulley B and carries a block C of Mass M (=2m) as shown in the given figure. At a instant at the string between the ring and the pulley makes an angle \theta with the rod, (a)Show that, if the ring slides with a speed v, the block descends with speed v cos\theta. (b) With what acceleration will the ring start moving if the system is released from rest with \theta=~30^\circ?

Homework Equations



Newtons Equations, free body diagram

The Attempt at a Solution



Well, this question happens to be from a textbook. And its a solved one too.. The solution which they have given is quite complicated! I thought I'd get a brief explanation of "why and how" over it, and yes an alternative method would be highly appreciated!

The solution, is like this (as given in the book),

Suppose in a small time interval \delta t the ring is displaced from A to A' and the block from C to C'. Drop a perpendicular A'P from A' to AB. For small displacements A'B~ PB (I didnt get this!), since the length is constant (?), we have,
AB+BC= A'B+BC'
AP+PB+BC=A'B+BC'
AP=BC'-BC=CC' (as A'B=PB)

AA'cos\theta= CC'

or \frac{AA'cos\theta}{\delta t}=~\frac{CC'}{\delta t}

Therefor, (velocity of the ring)cos\theta= (velocity of the block)Please help :cry:
 

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When the ring moves with a velocity v horizontally, its component along the string is v*cos(theta). Since the length of string between the ring and block is costant, the velocity of the block is equal to v*cos(theta).
 
Well, did you have a look at the diagram? It hasnt been approved yet..
 

Suppose in a small time interval LaTeX Code: \\delta t the ring is displaced from A to A' and the block from C to C'. Drop a perpendicular A'P from A' to AB. For small displacements A'B~ PB (I didnt get this!), since the length is constant (?), we have,

When A and A(dash) are very close, AB and A(dash)B are nearly equal. If you take BA(dash) equal to BP, AP becomes A*A(dash)cos(theta) and A*A(dash)/t = velocity. The length of the string is ABC = A(dash)BC(dash)
 
okay, that's fine with me, I've several more problems over the free body diagrams! I'll post it in mean time! Thank You!
 
To solve this, I first used the units to work out that a= m* a/m, i.e. t=z/λ. This would allow you to determine the time duration within an interval section by section and then add this to the previous ones to obtain the age of the respective layer. However, this would require a constant thickness per year for each interval. However, since this is most likely not the case, my next consideration was that the age must be the integral of a 1/λ(z) function, which I cannot model.
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