Q47 of 48 Page 48

Two identical steel cubes (masses 50g, side 1cm) collide head-on face to face with a speed of 10cm/s each. Find the maximum compression of each. Young’s modulus for steel = Y= 2 × 1011 N/m2.

From Hooke’s law, ,


Where F = Force,


A= Area of cross section


Y= young’s modulus


L=initial length of the cube


Δ L=change in length


Kinetic energy of both boxes K.E.


Now, the kinetic energy gets converted to potential energy due to compression and,


P.E.



Now, P.E = K.E




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44

A block of mass 1 kg is pushed up a surface inclined to horizontal at an angle of 30° by a force of 10 N parallel to the inclined surface (Fig. 6.15). The coefficient of friction between block and the incline is 0.1. If the block is pushed up by 10 m along the incline, calculate

(a) work done against gravity


(b) work done against force of friction


(c) increase in potential energy


(d) increase in kinetic energy


(e) work done by applied force.



45

A curved surface is shown in Fig. 6.16. The portion BCD is free of friction. There are three spherical balls of identical radii and masses. Balls are released from rest one by one from A which is at a slightly greater height than C.


With the surface AB, ball 1 has large enough friction to cause rolling down without slipping; ball 2 has a small friction and ball 3 has a negligible friction.


(a) For which balls is total mechanical energy conserved?


(b) Which ball(s) can reach D?


(c) For balls which do not reach D, which of the balls can reach back A?


46

A rocket accelerates straight up by ejecting gas downwards. In a small time interval ∆t, it ejects a gas of mass ∆m at a relative speed u. Calculate KE of the entire system at t + ∆t and t and show that the device that ejects gas does work = ∆m u2 in this time interval (neglect gravity).

48

A balloon filled with helium rises against gravity increasing its potential energy. The speed of the balloon also increases as it rises. How do you reconcile this with the law of conservation of mechanical energy? You can neglect viscous drag of air and assume that density of air is constant.