What Is the Speed of an Object Released from a Spring?

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SUMMARY

The speed of a 0.25 kg object released from a spring with a spring constant of 80 N/m is calculated using the principles of oscillation and energy conservation. When the object is 0.05 m above the equilibrium position, its speed is 2.5 m/s, and the maximum speed occurs at the equilibrium position, calculated to be 2.7 m/s. The amplitude of oscillation is determined to be 0.15 m, which is the initial displacement from the equilibrium position. The relationship between potential energy (PE) and kinetic energy (KE) is crucial for understanding the motion of the object.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of Hooke's Law and spring constants
  • Familiarity with the concepts of potential energy (PE) and kinetic energy (KE)
  • Knowledge of simple harmonic motion and oscillation equations
  • Ability to perform basic calculus for velocity calculations
NEXT STEPS
  • Study the derivation of the equations for simple harmonic motion
  • Learn about energy conservation in oscillatory systems
  • Explore the effects of varying spring constants on oscillation speed
  • Investigate real-world applications of spring oscillators in engineering
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Students studying physics, particularly those focusing on mechanics and oscillatory motion, as well as educators looking for examples of energy conservation in spring systems.

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Homework Statement



A .25kg object suspended on a light spring is released form a postition of .15m above the stretched equilibrium position. THe spring has a spring constatnt of 80N/m. What is the speed of the object when the object is .05m above its equilibrium position? What is the maximum speed and where does it occur?


Homework Equations


I'm not sure what equation i need for this


The Attempt at a Solution


I would believe that the speed of the object would be the same if it were .05m above or below equilibrium. But any help in pointing me in the right direction would be helpful. THanks
 
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I think your belief is correct, which is a good sign. So you are probably picturing the object oscillating around the equilibrium position. There's an explicit formula for this motion y=A*cos(omega*t) where y is deviation from equilibrium. Can you figure out how to get A and omega? (Hint: omega involves the spring constant and the mass.) Now velocity is dy/dt.
 
Ok i got omega by omega = sqrt(80n/m/.25kg) = 17.889 but I can't figure out how to get A.
 
'A' is the amplitude of oscillation. y goes from +A to -A. When the object is released it's at rest. That's A. BTW the units of omega are 1/sec. Don't leave out units.
 
I think Dick made things too hard. (no pun intended)

Try conservation of energy!
 
bah, i don't understand. is the A = to 1 since its between .05 and -.05? and also how do you solve for t?
 
this is one of my last questions and I've been trying ot figure it out for like 2 hours now, please help
 
The oscillation is between 0.15m and -0.15m from equilibrium. A=0.15m.
 
ok so v = sqrt(80n/m/.25kg)*(.15^2-.05^2) = 2.5 m/s and it would be that same for -.05 because -.05^2 = .05^2. But how would u find the maximum speed and where is it occurring?
 
  • #10
So it has maximum velolcity at the equilibrium so just plug in "0" instead of .05 and i get 2.7 m/s, this sounds reasonable. Is this correct?
 
  • #11
Sucks@Physics said:
So it has maximum velolcity at the equilibrium so just plug in "0" instead of .05 and i get 2.7 m/s, this sounds reasonable. Is this correct?

Sounds correct.
 
  • #12
still way to hard.

PE of a spring is equal to 1/2kx^2 where x is distance from equilibrium and KE is 1/2 mv^2. An oscilator is just a system that conserves energy. At one extreme (your initial condition) There is only potential energy of the spring because the object is at rest (it is changing directions) at full stretch. You corectly noticed that this is true symetrically on both sides of equilibrium. At the other extreme the spring is at equilibrium (exerting no force) but the mass is moving and has Kinetic Energy. Therefor at maximum speed the KE(final)=PE(initial) and the 1/2 cancel out leaving mv^2=kx^2 and the spring was orignally stretched. This leaves you with v = sqrt(80n/m/.25kg)*(.15^2) and as you said correctly before the change is the spring in part a) is .10 and you therefor did this correctly.
I think that although your math is correct and Dick helped you with this you don't really have a sense of the physics that is occurring. Try to get a mental picture before you resort to complicated formula's and you life will be easier.
 

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