Uniform Circular Motion questions

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To solve the first problem of a mass attached to a string making a 30-degree angle, the tension in the string must be analyzed in terms of its components: the horizontal component provides centripetal force, while the vertical component balances the weight. The calculations show that the tension equals 4.9 N, leading to a tangential speed of 4.12 m/s. For the second problem, the approach involves using the normal force instead of tension and determining the radius in relation to height and the vertex angle. The discussions emphasize the importance of component analysis in both scenarios. Understanding these principles is crucial for solving uniform circular motion problems effectively.
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1. A .25kg mass attached to a string of length 1m is spun in a horizontal circle. At what speed must it travel so that the angle the string makes with the horizontal is 30 degrees?

2. A block of mass m slides around a circular path in a conic surface with vertex angle 2theta. Determine the speed of rotation at a height h above the vertex.

Im lost at what to do for both problems. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks. :smile:
 
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1. think components. The mass makes no differnce here. all that matters is the tangential speed and the radius. Call the tension in the string "T" and ask yourself "what component of T provides centripetal force, and what component of T balances weight?"
 
"1. think components. The mass makes no differnce here. all that matters is the tangential speed and the radius. Call the tension in the string "T" and ask yourself "what component of T provides centripetal force, and what component of T balances weight?""

The centripetal force is provided by the horizontal component of T.
So: T*cos30 = m v^2/r

The vertical component of T balances the weight.
So: T*sin30 = mg
So T = (.25)(9.8) / sin30 = 4.9 N ?

Then use T to find V:
(4.9)(cos30) = (.25) v^2 / 1
4.24 / .25 = v^2
16.96 = v^2
v= 4.12 m/s

Right or wrong?
 
doesn't it feel right? Notice how any value for mass would have worked?
 
ask yourself the same questions for #2. Except it's the normal force, not tension. And find a value for radius in terms of h and theta.
 
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