Thank you ergeorge you made the connection I couldn't think of.
A 5.4g bullet (m1) is fired at 345 m/s at a stationary 2.93kg block (m2) attached to a spring with k = 2000 N/m. The spring compresses 1.4 cm and the bullet comes through the block, what is the velocity of the bullet after it leaves the block?
Here is a really really sad illustration of it.
What I did:
m1v1 = (m1 + m2)v2 <---- solve for v2
1/2 (m1 + m2) v2^2 = .59 <-- plug in v2
1/2 k x^2 = .39 <--- spring energy
.59 - .39 = .2 <----- kinetic E - spring E
.2 = 1/2 m1 vf^2 <----- energy difference (loss) = kinetic energy of bullet after it exits the block.
vf = 12.1 m/s
Can anybody confirm this or show me where I went wrong? I think I did it correctly but I confused myself thoroughly while doing it and I'm not sure anymore.
A 5.4g bullet (m1) is fired at 345 m/s at a stationary 2.93kg block (m2) attached to a spring with k = 2000 N/m. The spring compresses 1.4 cm and the bullet comes through the block, what is the velocity of the bullet after it leaves the block?
Here is a really really sad illustration of it.
What I did:
m1v1 = (m1 + m2)v2 <---- solve for v2
1/2 (m1 + m2) v2^2 = .59 <-- plug in v2
1/2 k x^2 = .39 <--- spring energy
.59 - .39 = .2 <----- kinetic E - spring E
.2 = 1/2 m1 vf^2 <----- energy difference (loss) = kinetic energy of bullet after it exits the block.
vf = 12.1 m/s
Can anybody confirm this or show me where I went wrong? I think I did it correctly but I confused myself thoroughly while doing it and I'm not sure anymore.
