You swing a bucket full of water in a vertical circle at the end of a rope. The mass of the bucket plus the water is 3.5kg.The center of mass of the bucket plus the water moves in a circle of radius. At the instant that the bucket is at the top of the circle, the speed of the bucket is 4 m/s. What is the tension in the rope at this instant?

Short Answer

Expert verified

The tension in the rope at this instant is 8.78N.

Step by step solution

01

Given

The mass of the bucket plus the water is. m=3.5kgThe center of mass of the bucket plus the water moves in a circle of radiusR=1.3m .The speed of the bucket is v=4m/s

02

Definition of force.

A force is a push or pull on an object is because of the interaction of the thing with another object. Every time two things interact, a force is exerted on each of them .The acted force may be of attraction or of repulsion .The two items no longer feel the force after the interaction ends

03

Find the tension in the rope at this instant.

The net force on an object is equal to the rate of change of momentum and can be written as the sum of two components.

The parallel rate of change of momentumdpdt and the perpendicular rate of change of momentumdpdt are the two elements that we are concerned with.

Fnet=dpdt=dpdtll+dpdt

In this case, the force acting on the object is in +y or -y direction, therefore, there is no parallel force and equals zero.

dpdt=0

As a result, the rate change is the direction change owing to the perpendicular rate of change.

The net force exerted on the object equals the rate change of the momentum and the magnitude of the perpendicular rate change at speeds much less than the speed of light is given by

Fnet=dpdt=mv2R

Also, the object is under two forces, the tension forceFTof the string and its weight, so the net force of both forces is

Fnet=FT+mg

Therefore,

FT+mg=mv2RFT=mv2R-mg

Now put the values for m, v, g , and R to get the tension force

Fr=mv2R-mg=3.5kg4m/s21.3m-3.5kg9.8m/s2=8.78N

Thus, the tension in the rope at this instant is 8.78N.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

In the 1970 sthe astronomer Vera Rubin made observations of distant galaxies that she interpreted as indicating that perhaps 90%of the mass in a galaxy is invisible to us ("dark matter"). She measured the speed with which stars orbit the center of a galaxy, as a function of the distance of the stars from the center. The orbital speed was determined by measuring the Doppler shift of the light from the stars, an effect that makes light shift toward the red end of the spectrum ("red shift") if the star has a velocity component away from us, and makes light shift toward the blue end of the spectrum if the star has a velocity component toward us.

She found that for stars farther out from the center of the galaxy, the orbital speed of the star hardly changes with distance from the center of the galaxy, as is indicated in Figure 5.79. The visible components of the galaxy (stars, and illuminated clouds of dust) are most dense at the center of the galaxy and thin out rapidly as you move away from the center, so most of the visible mass is near the center. (a) Predict the speed v ofa star going around the center of a galaxy in a circular orbit, as a function of the star's distance r from the center of the galaxy,assumingthat almost all of the galaxy's mass M is concentrated at the center.

(b) Construct a logical argument as to why Rubin concluded that much of the mass of a galaxy is not visible to us. Reason from principles discussed in this chapter, and your analysis of part (a). Explain your reasoning. You need to address the following issues: (i) Rubin's observations are not consistent with your prediction in (a). (ii) Most of the visible matter is in the center of the galaxy. (iii) Your prediction in (a) assumed that most of the mass is at the center.

This issue has not yet been resolved, and is still a current topic of astrophysics research. Here is a discussion by Rubin of her work: ''Dark Matter in Spiral Galaxies '' by Vera C. Rubin, Scientific American, June 1983 (96-108). You can find several graphs of the rotation curves for spiral galaxies on page 101 of this article.

A child rides on a playground merry-go-round, from the center. The merry-go-round makes one complete revolution every 5 s. How large is the net force on the child? In what direction does the net force act?

The angle between the gravitational force on a planet by a star and the momentum of the planet is 61at a particular instant. At this instant the magnitude of the planet’s momentum is 3.1×1029kgm/s, and the magnitude of the gravitational force on the planet is 1.8×1023N. (a) What is the parallel component of the force on the planet by the star? (b) What will be the magnitude of the planet’s momentum after 8h?

A child of mass 35kgsits on a wooden horse on a carousel. The wooden horse is 3.3mfrom the center of the carousel, which rotates at a constant rate and completes one revolution every 5.2s.

(a) What are the magnitude and direction (tangential in direction of velocity, tangential in the opposite direction of the velocity, radial outward, radial inward) of (dp/dt)p, the parallel component of dp/dtfor the child?

(b) What are the magnitude and direction of \p\dp/dt. the perpendicular component of dp/dtfor the child?

(c) What are the magnitude and direction of the met force acting on the child? (d) What objects in the surroundings contribute to this horizontal net force acting on the child? (There are also vertical forces, but these cancel each other if the horse doesn't move up and down.)

An object moving at a constant speed of 23m/sis making a turn with a radius of curvature of 4m(this is the radius of the kissing circle). The object's momentum has a magnitude of . What is the magnitude of the rate of change of the momentum? What is the magnitude of the net force?

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Physics Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free