Y coordinate of the system's center of mass?

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SUMMARY

The discussion focuses on calculating the y coordinate of the center of mass for a system consisting of three uniform thin rods: two vertical rods each with a mass of 12 g and a horizontal rod with a mass of 31 g. The x coordinate was correctly determined to be 14 cm. The correct approach to find the y coordinate involves using the formula for center of mass, specifically applying it to the vertical and horizontal rods while considering their respective masses and positions. The final calculation for the y coordinate is derived from the total mass and the individual contributions of each rod.

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raptik
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Homework Statement


In Fig. 9-39, three uniform thin rods, each of length L = 28 cm, form an inverted U. The vertical rods each have a mass of 12 g; the horizontal rod has a mass of 31 g. What are (a) the x coordinate and (b) the y coordinate of the system's center of mass? (Give your answer in cm)

http://edugen.wiley.com/edugen/courses/crs1650/art/qb/qu/c09/fig09_37.gif


Homework Equations


xcom = (m1x1 + m2x2)/M


The Attempt at a Solution


I got the x coordinate alright at 14cm but I can't find the y coordinate. I took the center of mass between the two vertical rods with y1 = 14cm and its m1 = 24g as total of the vertical rods. I then compared that center of mass to the center of mass of the horizontal rod with y2 = 28cm and its m2 = 31g. I thus found y = 21.89, but this is apparently wrong, could somebody please tell me what it is that I'm doing wrong?
 
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Apply the same formula in the y direction.

2 vertical rods with com = L/2 and mass m = 2*(m*L/2) = mL

The horizontal rod at the top is m*L from the bottom, so the sum is 2m*L and with M = 3*m then

Com-y = 2*m*L/3*m = 2/3 L
 
What you said doesn't completely agree with the information, because the mass of the horizontal rod is different from the mass of the vertical rod. Also, where are you getting the mass of the rod with m = 2*(m*L/2)? Your explanation confuses me. I'm thinking that the mass is relative to the two masses so the m1 = 2(12g) and the y1 = L/2 which is 14cm. Is this wrong?
 
raptik said:
What you said doesn't completely agree with the information, because the mass of the horizontal rod is different from the mass of the vertical rod.
Sorry. Yes the horizontal rod has a different mass. I missed that. But the treatment is the same.
Also, where are you getting the mass of the rod with m = 2*(m*L/2)? Your explanation confuses me. I'm thinking that the mass is relative to the two masses so the m1 = 2(12g) and the y1 = L/2 which is 14cm. Is this wrong?

The vertical rods - 2 of them - each have the same mass and each have a Com at L/2 ... hence 2*(m(L/2))

So putting numbers to it then

m*L = .012*.28

And the horizontal rod is contributing a moment of .031*.28

Total then is (.012 + .031)*.28 /M = .033(.28)/.055 = 3/5(.28)
 

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