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MIT16 07F09 hw05

This document contains a 3 problem set for the MIT course 16.07 Dynamics. Problem 1 has two parts involving the calculation of angular velocities and impulses for a pendulum struck by a moving bullet. Problem 2 has two parts, the first calculating the final velocity of a flatcar when children of mass m run and jump off in different scenarios. The second part considers what happens when a small ball of mass m hits a large ball of mass M after being dropped from a height h. Problem 3 also has two parts, the first calculating the gravitational potential energy of a block of uniform density sitting on a cylinder, and the second considers how this potential energy changes as the block rotates through an angle θ. The document provides

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
52 views5 pages

MIT16 07F09 hw05

This document contains a 3 problem set for the MIT course 16.07 Dynamics. Problem 1 has two parts involving the calculation of angular velocities and impulses for a pendulum struck by a moving bullet. Problem 2 has two parts, the first calculating the final velocity of a flatcar when children of mass m run and jump off in different scenarios. The second part considers what happens when a small ball of mass m hits a large ball of mass M after being dropped from a height h. Problem 3 also has two parts, the first calculating the gravitational potential energy of a block of uniform density sitting on a cylinder, and the second considers how this potential energy changes as the block rotates through an angle θ. The document provides

Uploaded by

buddlightbeerlog
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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NAME : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

16.07 Dynamics

Problem Set 5

Out date: Oct 3, 2007

Due date: Oct 10, 2007

Time Spent [minutes]


Problem 1
Problem 2
Problem 3
Study Time

Turn in each problem on separate sheets so that grading can be done in parallel
Problem 1 (20 points) Part A
A pendulum consists of two 3.5 kg concentrated masses positioned as shown on a
massless but rigid bar. The pendulum is swinging through the vertical position with
a clockwise angular velocity ω = 5 rad/s when a 50g bullet traveling with velocity
v = 350 m/s in the direction shown strikes the lower mass and becomes embedded in
it. Calculate the angular velocity ω � which the pendulum has immediately after impact
and find the maximum angular deflection φ of the pendulum.

Part B For the pendulum in Part A, find the impulse acting on the support pivot
at the instant of impact; acting on the rod at the boundary between the rod and the
upper mass at the instant of impact; and acting on the rod between the rod and the
lower mass at the instant of impact. Ignore the forces due to gravity and centrifugal
acceleration. (Hint: since the rod is massless, the forces on it must balance to zero.
The forces are transmitted between the pivot and the masses to cause the observed
motion.)
Problem 2 (10 points)

Part A
2 children, each of mass m, stand on a small flatcar of mass M , which is initially at
rest. They run towards the rear of the car, reach a relative velocity of u with respect
to the car and jump off the end of the flatcar. (That is, an instant after jumping the
relative velocity between the children and the cart is u). As a result, the car rolls in
the opposite direction without friction.

a) what is the final velocity of the flatcar if the two children run and jump at the
same time?

b) what is the final velocity of the flatcar if one child remains fixed with respect to
the car while the first runs and jumps off with relative velocity u; and then the
2nd child runs, reaches a relative velocity u and then jumps?

c) which case above gives a larger velocity?

Part B
A small ball of mass m is placed on top of a large rigid ball of mass M , and the
two balls are dropped to the floor from a height h. Assume that the two balls are a
millimeter apart when the first ball hits the ground. What happens? How high does
the small ball rise after the collision? Assume that all collisions are elastic (i.e. energy
is conserved) and that m � M .
Problem 3 (10 points)

Part A. A block of uniform density, of height H and length L, is initially sitting sym­
metrically on a fixed cylinder of radius R in a gravitational field. Thus its center of
mass is directly above the θ = 0 position on the cylinder. What is the gravitational
potential energy of the block?
Now, the mass is free to rotate as shown with its surface keeping contact without
slipping on the surface of the cylinder. After it has rotated through an angle θ, what
is the gravitational potential energy of the block? Express your final result in θ using
the “small angle” approximation: replace sinθ by θ and cosθ by 1 − 12 θ2 .
How does the result depend upon H/R? Does the gravitational potential energy in­
crease or decrease as the block rotate through an angle θ. What is the implication of
this dependence of the potential energy on H/R?
MIT OpenCourseWare
http://ocw.mit.edu

16.07 Dynamics
Fall 2009

For information about citing these materials or our Terms of Use, visit: http://ocw.mit.edu/terms.

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