Originally posted by: jaydee
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.
Ok, either I'm a moron, or 1/2k*x^2 = 0.196 J (k=2000 N/m, x=0.014m). I think you forgot to divide by 2 there.
I think overall you're wrong, it's not that simple. For conservation of energy, you have the bullet originally, the energy "absorbed" by the spring, the kinetic energy of the moving block (m2), and the kinetic energy of the bullet as it exits the block.
Your 2 unknowns are going to be the velocity of the block after striking, and the bullet after exiting, you can solve for that, because you also know that momentum is conserved (back up to the previous sentence with "momentum" in place of "energy").
I'm on vacation, I don't feel like solving for the 2 unknowns, but you should be able to take it from there, or anyone else interested can continue.
The block is motionless (ie. has no kinetic energy) at the point when the spring is at its maximum compression. So your conservation of energy equation is simply:
KE0 = PE + KE1
KE0: initial kinetic energy of the bullet = 0.5 M1 V0^2 (V0: initial velocity, M1: mass of the bullet)
PE: Potential energy of the spring at its max compression = 0.5 K x^2
KE1: Kinetic energy of the bullet after leaving the block = 0.5 M1 V1^2
0.5 M1 V0^2 = 0.5 K x^2 + 0.5 M1 V1^2
M V0^2 - K x^2 = M V1^2
V1 = sqrt((M1 V0^2 - K x^2)/M1)
V1 = sqrt((0.0054*345^2 - 2000*0.014^2)/0.0054)
V1 = 344.89 M/s
Note that the mass of the block is irrelevent because we are working the problem at a point when it is at rest.
As I stated in a previous post, this is neglecting some important bits like friction, and the energy spent tearing a hole through the block and deforming the bullet.
