jacobd
Mechanical
- Jul 23, 2002
- 12
Some time ago I came across an equation for calculating impulse of a falling object, given its mass and how far it falls.
the equations were:
Velocity: v^2 = 2gH (I'm curious how this was derived)
Impulse: J = m(2gH)^1/2
What I was interested in was estimating the forces generated by a 'rigid' falling object colliding with another 'rigid' object. By dividing the impulse by the time that elapses during the collision the forces could be estimated.
I wanted to use this to estimate the forces generated by a 1200# weight, attached to a 'solid' object with a chain, falling a given distance until the slack in the chain is taken up. The worst case is what I'm after, so I'm making assumptions that some items are 'rigid' and 'solid' although I know they will flex and absorb some of the force, etc...
I'm trying to come up with a reasonable collision time. I know it is hard to predict without knowing the specifics, but should I be in the ballpark of 1/10 sec, 1/100 sec, maybe even less time?
An example I worked out:
1200# weight falls 2 in:
m = 37.3 slugs
F = [37.3(2 * [32.2 ft/sec^2] * .17 ft)^.5] / .1 sec = 4084#
this seems a lot more reasonable than 40,840# based on a shorter elapsed time of .01 sec. Any comments are appreciated.
JD
the equations were:
Velocity: v^2 = 2gH (I'm curious how this was derived)
Impulse: J = m(2gH)^1/2
What I was interested in was estimating the forces generated by a 'rigid' falling object colliding with another 'rigid' object. By dividing the impulse by the time that elapses during the collision the forces could be estimated.
I wanted to use this to estimate the forces generated by a 1200# weight, attached to a 'solid' object with a chain, falling a given distance until the slack in the chain is taken up. The worst case is what I'm after, so I'm making assumptions that some items are 'rigid' and 'solid' although I know they will flex and absorb some of the force, etc...
I'm trying to come up with a reasonable collision time. I know it is hard to predict without knowing the specifics, but should I be in the ballpark of 1/10 sec, 1/100 sec, maybe even less time?
An example I worked out:
1200# weight falls 2 in:
m = 37.3 slugs
F = [37.3(2 * [32.2 ft/sec^2] * .17 ft)^.5] / .1 sec = 4084#
this seems a lot more reasonable than 40,840# based on a shorter elapsed time of .01 sec. Any comments are appreciated.
JD