Lab 7 Ballistic Pendulum! !
Transcription
Lab 7 Ballistic Pendulum! !
Lab 7 Ballistic Pendulum! ! Introduction We will use the ballistic pendulum to examine how a complex set of physical processes can be broken down into simpler single processes for analysis. Equipment Ballistic pendulum. Description The ballistic pendulum is a tool for measuring the launch speed, or muzzle velocity, of a usually small and fast projectile. The projectile is fired at the bob of a pendulum that catches the projectile. Subsequently, the pendulum swings up to a certain height or angle to indirectly indicate the speed of the projectile. Below are the before and after photos of a trial. The gun is a horizontal spring launcher. Notice, in this case, that only the angle indicator has moved. The discussion below explains the processes involved in the functioning of the ballistic pendulum. Different physical principles apply to each process. Primarily, we are interested in whether we can apply momentum and/or energy conservation to each process. 1. Firing The process starts with the launch. A projectile of mass, m, is launched. At the muzzle of the launcher, the speed of the projectile is called vlaunch. pendulum v=0 vlaunch launcher During the launch, the projectile picks up momentum and kinetic energy. momentum and the kinetic energy of the projectile are not conserved. h Therefore, both the page 1 2. Traversing the Gap The projectile flies through a small gap between the muzzle and the bob of the pendulum. pendulum vlaunch v h launcher Let’s look at momentum first. The bearing does not interact with anything other than the Earth so let’s make the bearing our system. The question to ask is whether there is an external net force acting on the system. There is. It is due to Earth’s gravity. Therefore, the momentum is not conserved. However, since the launch speed is horizontal and gravity acts vertically, gravity does not alter the horizontal component of the momentum. Therefore, the momentum we care about does not change and is conserved, so the velocity is unchanged as well. pi,x = p f ,x ⇒ mvlaunch = mv ⇒ v = vlaunch As for the energy, the question to ask is whether there are non-conservative forces acting on the system. Assuming air resistance is negligible, there is not. Therefore, the energy of the system is conserved. 3. Next, the projectile is caught by the bob of the pendulum. This results in the combined object of both the projectile and the pendulum bob traveling at a reduced speed vpendulum. pendulum vlaunch vpendulum launcher h Since the bearing interacts with the pendulum, let’s make the system be both objects. For the momentum, there are external forces on the system. They are gravity and tension. It happens that they act in opposite directions during this process so that they cancel. The external net force is zero. Momentum is conserved. Momentum conservation for the system in the horizontal direction gives the following equation. pi,x = p f ,x ⇒ mvlaunch = (M + m)v pendulum As for the energy, this is a completely inelastic collision so it is not conserved. You can hear the energy coming out of the system. You can feel it in the vibration of the apparatus too. 4. The last process is when the pendulum swings up, in a circular arc, to its final, resting position. pendulum launcher h The bearing and the pendulum are moving together so let’s keep them as the system. For the momentum, the velocity of the system changes direction, so the momentum is not conserved. page 2 For the energy, is there any no non-conservative work done to the system. Gravity does work, but it is conservative. Tension is a non-conservative force. The work that it does is the following. W = F ⋅ Δx = T ⋅ Δs The tension points toward the center around which the pendulum rotates while the pendulum travels along the edge of the circle. This means the tension is always perpendicular to displacement. Hence, the work cone is zero. Even though there is an non-conservative force on the pendulum, the non-conservative work is still zero. The energy is still conserved. Ei = E f ⇒ Ki +U i = K f +U f 1 (M + m)v 2pendulum + 0 = 0 + (M + m)gh 2 Combining the two equations results in an equation for the launch speed based on the height increase. vlaunch = M +m 2gh m Recall from the pictures that we are actually measuring the angle rotated by the pendulum rather than the height traveled by the pendulum. We need two things. One, how is the height related to the angle. The following diagram shows how the height is calculated. R Rcosθ R R–Rcosθ h = R − R cos θ = R(1 − cos θ) Two, where do measure the position of the pendulum? The mass of the entire pendulum is distributed unevenly along the pendulum; it is what is called a physical pendulum. unsurprisingly, the “location” of the mass is the center of mass, RCM. Together, we have this for the launch speed. vlaunch = M +m 2gRCM (1 − cos θ) m Experiment: Ballistic Pendulum Measure the mass of the bearing. Let’s estimate its uncertainty to be 0.5 gram. Measure the mass of the entire pendulum assembly including the stem. Let’s estimate its uncertainty to be 0.5 gram as well. Next, you are going to find the distance of the center of mass from the pivot point, RCM. Place the bearing inside the pendulum. Balance the pendulum on the edge of a ruler. Measure the distance page 3 from the pivot to this location. millimeters, so be careful. Let’s estimate the uncertainty in this measurement to be 2 Now, we are ready to measure the angle. Measure the angle indicated when the pendulum is at its resting position in case it is not zero so that you can calculate the actual angle traversed. Park the pendulum to the out-of-the-way position. Load the spring launcher to three clicks. Release the pendulum to its normal, resting position. Rotate the angle indicator to about 30°. Launch the bearing. If the resulting angle is more than 5° above 30°, start with a larger angle for the indicator. Measure the final angle 10 times. Find the average and the standard deviation. Use the equation above to calculate the launch speed. Include the uncertainty. Experiment: Zero Launch Angle Notice that we don’t know the expected value for this experiment. We will try to verify the above results by doing a completely different experiment. We will do a zero launch angle experiments. Park the pendulum out of the way. Place the apparatus at a designated location pointing at an empty area on the floor. Load and fire the bearing once to find the location where it will land. Tape a piece of paper centered on where the projectile landed. Fire the projectile at the paper a total of 10 times. Measure all distances from the bottom of the “launch position” of the bearing. This is marked on the launcher. Since this is all about free fall, the launcher must not have influence. Also, since we are measuring where the bearing lands, we need the location of the bottom of the bearing in the beginning. Measure the height of the bottom of the launch position from the floor. Measure the ranges of 10 trials. Calculate the mean and standard deviation of the ranges. page 4 Let’s also assume there is some uncertainty in the launch angle. The experiment might not be perfectly level for a number of reasons. Let’s estimate a maximum of 0.3° uncertainty. This affects the range by a certain amount. You can calculate this amount by calculating the range with a launch angle of ±0.3°. Add this uncertainty to the range uncertainty above. Calculate the initial speed from this data. Include the uncertainty. Analysis Here is a case where two measurements of the same value are done two different ways without an expected value. How do we know if the two experiments agree? We now have two pdf’s, one for each experiment. One question we want to answer first is “does experiment 1 agree with experiment 2?” The value to calculate is “what is the probability that a result from experiment 1 will fall within some tolerance (usually within one or two standard deviations) from the mean of the results from experiment 2?” For example, let’s say our two sets of results have the following distributions. Exp. 1 Exp. 2 results limits When we compare experiment 1 to experiment 2, the result of experiment 2 provides the limits from which to calculate the probability and experiment 1 provides the distribution. The probability that a result from experiment 1 will fall within one standard deviation from the mean of the results from experiment 2 is the shaded area. In the above diagram, the probability is about 16%. The way to calculate this is again using the “normalcdf” function. normalcdf (mean of exp. 2 − std. dev. of exp. 2, mean of exp. 2 + std. dev. of exp. 2, mean of exp. 1, std. dev. of exp. 1) So what is good agreement and what is poor agreement? This is just a matter of degree. With a tolerance of one standard deviation, let me say that 0% to 33% is poor, 33% to 67% is good, and 67% to 100% is excellent. Note also that you can reverse the role of the two results and calculate a different value for the probability. Experiment 1 can agree with experiment 2 but not the other way around. Calculate both probabilities, “the probability that results from experiment 1 will fall within one standard deviation from the mean of experiment 2” and “the probability that results from experiment 2 will fall within one standard deviation from the mean of experiment 1”. Conclusion Present your results from the two experiments and address whether the results from the two independent experiments agree with each other. page 5