njlee
Mechanical
- Jul 5, 2001
- 36
Hi Gurus,
Is there any theories or equations relate force to velocity?
An object, which is tied to a rope, moves in constant velocity. When the rope is taut, what is the tension on the rope at that instant (when the object is instantly stopped/reversed)?
I think the force will be approaching infinite because F=ma and there is zero time for the object to decelerate. However, in real life, it is impossible. I guess the rope would have to be deformed a little bit for the deceleration of the object. how much? how fast? .01 second, .0001 second?
conservation of momentum theory only provides solution of the velocity of the object after impact, not the force, am I right?
What the maximum force resulted from the impact. I'm interested in finding out ways to solve this kind of problem
Thanks for any advice.
Lee
Is there any theories or equations relate force to velocity?
An object, which is tied to a rope, moves in constant velocity. When the rope is taut, what is the tension on the rope at that instant (when the object is instantly stopped/reversed)?
I think the force will be approaching infinite because F=ma and there is zero time for the object to decelerate. However, in real life, it is impossible. I guess the rope would have to be deformed a little bit for the deceleration of the object. how much? how fast? .01 second, .0001 second?
conservation of momentum theory only provides solution of the velocity of the object after impact, not the force, am I right?
What the maximum force resulted from the impact. I'm interested in finding out ways to solve this kind of problem
Thanks for any advice.
Lee