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- 1.
- Consider a pair of coaxial springs.  
The spring constant of the outer (h1 = 1.2 
m high) spring is k1 = 800 
N/m and that of the inner (h2 = 0.7 
m high) spring is k2 = 1200 
N/m.  A 90 
kg mass is placed on top of this system and allowed to descend 
gradually to a state of static equilibrium.  
- (a)
- Where is the static equilibrium position?  
- (b)
- What is the period of a 1 cm oscillation about equilibrium?  
 
 
 
 
 
- 2.
- A frictionless roller coaster is built 
in a special shape such that if 
 x  is the horizontal distance from the centre 
(low point) of the parabola and  y  is the 
height above the low point,  x(t)  will exhibit 
 .
What is the shape  y(x)? .
What is the shape  y(x)?
 
- 3.
- A 1000 kg car sits on a frictionless level surface 
 attached to a horizontal spring.  What spring constant 
 will cause it to oscillate with a period of 1 s?  
 
- 4.
- Two identical masses hang from a spring.  
Previous measurements have shown that the 
period of oscillation of this system is 1.0 s.  
By damping out all oscillations, we prepare the system 
in a state of equilibrium, for which 
the distance  x0  from the ceiling 
to the equilibrium position of the end of the spring is 
1.0 m.  
The string between the two masses is then cut.  
- (a)
- What is the new period of oscillation?  
- (b)
- What is the new equilibrium position?  
 
- (c)
- What is the amplitude of the oscillation?  
 
 
- 5.
- Captain Picard 
places the starship Enterprise 
in a circular orbit about a 1-Solar-mass neutron star 
(radius 10 km) 
at a safe (??) distance of 6,000 km from its centre.  
- (a)
- What is the centripetal acceleration of 
the centre of gravity of the Enterprise? 
 
- (b)
- What is the period of its orbit?  
 
- (c)
- If Picard's head is 1.6 m further from the star than his feet, 
 what is the difference between the gravitational accelerations 
 of his head and feet?  
 
- (d)
- Comment on the probable effect of this difference.  
 
 
- 6.
- For a light mass m in a circular orbit about 
a much heavier mass M, prove 
that the total energy  E = K + U  is half the 
gravitational potential energy  U,  where we adopt the 
usual convention  as as .
(K is the kinetic energy.) .
(K is the kinetic energy.)
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
 Next: Oscillations and Waves
 Up: Old P120 Homework Questions
 Previous: Vectors and Energy