Why Is y - y0 Positive in Vertical Motion Problems?

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In vertical motion problems, the sign of y - y0 depends on the chosen coordinate system. If the downward direction is defined as positive, then y - y0 can be positive when the object is lowered. The acceleration due to gravity is conventionally defined as +9.81 m/s², but its sign in equations depends on the coordinate system used. Consistency in sign convention is crucial for solving these problems correctly. Understanding this flexibility in defining axes helps clarify why y - y0 can be positive even when the object descends.
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Homework Statement


In a stage production of Peter Pan, the 63 kg
actress playing Peter has to fly in vertically,
and to be in time with the music, she must
be lowered, starting from rest, a distance of
2.6 m in 2.2 s. Backstage, a smooth surface
sloped at 58 supports a counterweight of mass
m. What is the mass of the counterweight that
must be used? The pulley is of negligible mass
and is frictionless. The acceleration of gravity
is 9.81 m/s2 .


Homework Equations


y-y0 = Vot + 0.5at^2
m1a = T - m1gsin 58
m2a = m2g - T

The Attempt at a Solution


I already got the answer.
a= 1.07438 m/s^2
m1=58.57211916 kg

My question is, why is y - y0 positive? Should it not be negative since Peter Pan is lowered, making y < y0 which y0 = 2.6?? If I make y - y0 = -2.6, then I do not get correct value of the mass.
 
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Hi!
In your equations of motion, you've set the -y direction as positive, thereby you arrived at a positive acceleration.
Set the acceleration negative, then set y-y0 as the negative value you tried, and see for yourself; That will get you the right answer...
Daniel
 
danielakkerma said:
Hi!
In your equations of motion, you've set the -y direction as positive, thereby you arrived at a positive acceleration.
Set the acceleration negative, then set y-y0 as the negative value you tried, and see for yourself; That will get you the right answer...
Daniel
My acceleration does come out negative when I set y - y0 = -2.6. However, the value of the mass is wrong if I use a = -1.07438
 
It's not merely enough to change the sign. You have to set a different direction for it, in your force equations.
T is positive, heading upwards, the Weight is negative, downwards.
Specifically,
Alter this:
m1a = T - m1gsin 58
m1gsin(...) should thus have precedence.
 
Last edited:
Then would it be entirely wrong to set y - y0 = 2.6 instead of -2.6?
 
Of course not!
It's only a question of convention, of the selection of axes. In these mechanical problems, and indeed in many such ones in physics, the choice of our reference frame is truly arbitrary...
You've done everything properly, in my view,
Daniel
 
oh wow ok thank you very much. I undersand it clearly. Oh may I ask one more question then? is gravity = -9.8 or +9.8?
because in y-component velocity equation, i do not know which one is correct:
y - y0 = V0t + .5gt^2
or
y - y0 = V0t - 0.5gt^2
 
DrunkApple said:
oh wow ok thank you very much. I undersand it clearly. Oh may I ask one more question then? is gravity = -9.8 or +9.8?
because in y-component velocity equation, i do not know which one is correct:
y - y0 = V0t + .5gt^2
or
y - y0 = V0t - 0.5gt^2

Most people define the constant g = +9.81 m/s2. Therefore, whether the acceleration due to gravity is positive or negative once again depends entirely on your choice of sign convention (just as Daniel was saying before). Gravity points downward (in fact, this is what "down" means -- it's the direction in which gravity points). Therefore if you choose to define a coordinate system in which "downward is the negative y-direction," then in your equation, the acceleration due to gravity would be written as a = -g. In contrast, if you choose to define a coordinate system in which "downward is the positive y-direction," then you'd write the acceleration due to gravity as a = +g. Again, the choice is yours, but you must stick to it consistently.
 
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