Winch Physics: Finding Rates of Change in Vertical and Horizontal Directions

  • Thread starter Thread starter misterpockets
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Physics Winch
AI Thread Summary
The problem involves a winch pulling a 15-meter pipe from a height of 15 meters at a rate of -0.3 m/s. To find the rates of vertical (dy/dt) and horizontal (dx/dt) change when the pipe is at a height of 6 meters, two key equations are used: x^2 + y^2 = s^2 and x dx/dt + y dy/dt = s ds/dt. The challenge lies in resolving the rope's velocity into its vertical and horizontal components as the pipe transitions from a horizontal to a vertical position. The solution requires careful application of these relationships to determine the rates of change. Understanding these dynamics is crucial for accurately modeling the winch's operation.
misterpockets
Messages
2
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


A winch at the top of a 15 meter tall building pulls a pipe of length 15 meters. The winch pulls the rope in at the rate of -0.3 m/s. Find the rate of vertical change and the rate of horizontal change at the upper end of the pipe when y = 6 meters.


Homework Equations


x^2 + y^2 = s^2
x dx/dt + y dy/dt = s ds/dt

The Attempt at a Solution



The question is what is dx/dt and what is dy/dt. So I need two equations to relate the two.
I have about two pages full in my notebook, it's probably better that I not share them?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
So basically, the pipe starts horizontally and is then rotated to be vertical?

The rope is always pulling at velocity with magnitude v = 0.3 m/s, and one has to resolve the rope velocity into vertical and horizontal components.
 
Thank You!
 
Thread 'Struggling to make relation between elastic force and height'
Hello guys this is what I tried so far. I used the UTS to calculate the force it needs when the rope tears. My idea was to make a relationship/ function that would give me the force depending on height. Yeah i couldnt find a way to solve it. I also thought about how I could use hooks law (how it was given to me in my script) with the thought of instead of having two part of a rope id have one singular rope from the middle to the top where I could find the difference in height. But the...
Thread 'Voltmeter readings for this circuit with switches'
TL;DR Summary: I would like to know the voltmeter readings on the two resistors separately in the picture in the following cases , When one of the keys is closed When both of them are opened (Knowing that the battery has negligible internal resistance) My thoughts for the first case , one of them must be 12 volt while the other is 0 The second case we'll I think both voltmeter readings should be 12 volt since they are both parallel to the battery and they involve the key within what the...
Back
Top