COM ChYU 2

Physics Solution: Rods and Cylinders (Corrected)

Problem 2: Velocity of Particle A

1. Geometry and Coordinate System

Let the angle between the two rods be $\theta$. Since the triangle formed by the rods and the floor is isosceles (equal rod lengths $l$), the angle each rod makes with the vertical is $\alpha = \theta/2$.

Coordinates:

Let the origin be on the floor directly below the initial position of A. Let $y_A$ be the height of A and $x_A$ be its horizontal displacement.

  • Height of A: $y_A = l \cos \alpha = l \cos(\theta/2)$
  • Position of B: $x_B = x_A – l \sin \alpha$
  • Position of C: $x_C = x_A + l \sin \alpha$

Velocities (Differentiating with respect to time):

Let $\dot{\alpha} = \omega$. Then:

  • $\dot{y}_A = -l \sin \alpha \cdot \dot{\alpha}$
  • $\dot{x}_B = \dot{x}_A – l \cos \alpha \cdot \dot{\alpha}$
  • $\dot{x}_C = \dot{x}_A + l \cos \alpha \cdot \dot{\alpha}$

2. Conservation of Horizontal Momentum

There are no external horizontal forces on the system (frictionless floor). Initially, the system is at rest, so the total horizontal momentum is zero.

$$m \dot{x}_A + m \dot{x}_B + 2m \dot{x}_C = 0$$

Substitute the velocity expressions:

$$m \dot{x}_A + m(\dot{x}_A – l \cos \alpha \dot{\alpha}) + 2m(\dot{x}_A + l \cos \alpha \dot{\alpha}) = 0$$ $$4m \dot{x}_A + ml \cos \alpha \dot{\alpha} = 0$$ $$\dot{x}_A = -\frac{1}{4} l \cos \alpha \cdot \dot{\alpha}$$

3. Conservation of Energy

The only work done is by gravity on mass A. Masses B and C move horizontally on the floor, so their potential energy is constant.

  • Initial Energy (Rods vertical, $\alpha=0$): $U_i = mgl$.
  • Final Energy (Angle $\theta$): $U_f = mg(l \cos \alpha)$.
  • Kinetic Energy: $K = \frac{1}{2}m v_A^2 + \frac{1}{2}m v_B^2 + \frac{1}{2}(2m) v_C^2$.

Loss in PE = Gain in KE:

$$mg l (1 – \cos \alpha) = \frac{1}{2}m v_A^2 + \frac{1}{2}m v_B^2 + m v_C^2$$

We need to express the velocities in terms of a common parameter, say $K = l \dot{\alpha}$.

Velocity of A:

$$v_{Ax} = -\frac{1}{4} K \cos \alpha$$ $$v_{Ay} = -K \sin \alpha$$ $$v_A^2 = v_{Ax}^2 + v_{Ay}^2 = K^2 \left( \frac{1}{16}\cos^2 \alpha + \sin^2 \alpha \right)$$

Velocity of B and C:

$$v_B = \dot{x}_A – K \cos \alpha = -\frac{1}{4}K \cos \alpha – K \cos \alpha = -\frac{5}{4} K \cos \alpha$$ $$v_C = \dot{x}_A + K \cos \alpha = -\frac{1}{4}K \cos \alpha + K \cos \alpha = \frac{3}{4} K \cos \alpha$$

4. Solving for Velocity

Substitute velocities into the energy equation:

$$2gl(1 – \cos \alpha) = v_A^2 + v_B^2 + 2v_C^2$$

Substituting expressions in terms of $K$:

$$2gl(1 – \cos \alpha) = K^2 \left[ \left(\frac{\cos^2 \alpha}{16} + \sin^2 \alpha\right) + \frac{25 \cos^2 \alpha}{16} + 2\left(\frac{9 \cos^2 \alpha}{16}\right) \right]$$

Grouping terms:

$$[…] = \sin^2 \alpha + \frac{\cos^2 \alpha}{16} (1 + 25 + 18) = \sin^2 \alpha + \frac{44 \cos^2 \alpha}{16} = \sin^2 \alpha + \frac{11}{4} \cos^2 \alpha$$ $$[…] = \frac{4 \sin^2 \alpha + 11 \cos^2 \alpha}{4}$$

Now, we relate $K$ back to $v_A$. From the $v_A^2$ equation:

$$K^2 = \frac{v_A^2}{\frac{1}{16}\cos^2 \alpha + \sin^2 \alpha} = \frac{16 v_A^2}{\cos^2 \alpha + 16 \sin^2 \alpha}$$

Substitute $K^2$ into the main energy balance:

$$2gl(1 – \cos \alpha) = \left( \frac{16 v_A^2}{\cos^2 \alpha + 16 \sin^2 \alpha} \right) \left( \frac{11 \cos^2 \alpha + 4 \sin^2 \alpha}{4} \right)$$ $$2gl(1 – \cos \alpha) = v_A^2 \frac{4(11 \cos^2 \alpha + 4 \sin^2 \alpha)}{\cos^2 \alpha + 16 \sin^2 \alpha}$$

Solving for $v_A$ and substituting $\alpha = \theta/2$:

$$v_A = \sqrt{\frac{gl(1 – \cos(\theta/2))}{2} \cdot \frac{\cos^2(\theta/2) + 16\sin^2(\theta/2)}{11\cos^2(\theta/2) + 4\sin^2(\theta/2)}}$$
Note on Equivalence: If we define $\theta_{horiz} = 90^\circ – \theta/2$, then $\sin(\theta_{horiz}) = \cos(\theta/2)$. Substituting this transforms the result above into: $$v_A = \sqrt{\frac{gl}{2}(1 – \sin \theta_{horiz}) \frac{\sin^2 \theta_{horiz} + 16\cos^2 \theta_{horiz}}{11\sin^2 \theta_{horiz} + 4\cos^2 \theta_{horiz}}}$$ This matches the answer key provided.
A (m) B (m) C (2m) θ θ/2 θ/2 v_A