(III) We usually neglect the mass of a spring if it is small compared to the truss attached to it. But in some applications, the mass of the spring must be taken into account. Consider a spring of unstretched length l and mass M S uniformly distributed along the length of the spring. A mass m is attached to the end of the spring. One end of the spring is fixed and the mass m is allowed to vibrate horizontally without friction (Fig. 7–30). Each point on the spring moves with a velocity proportional to the distance from that point to the fixed end. For example, if the mass on the end moves with speed ϑ 0 , the midpoint of the spring moves with speed ϑ 0 / 2 Show that the kinetic energy of the mass plus spring when the mass is moving with velocity ϑ is K = 1 2 M ϑ 2 where M = m 1 3 M S is the “effective mass” of the system. [ Hint : Let D be the total length of the stretched spring. Then the velocity of a mass d m of a spring of length d x located at x is ϑ ( x ) − ϑ 0 ( x / D ) . Note also d m = d x ( M S / D ) .] FIGURE 7-30 Problem 68.
(III) We usually neglect the mass of a spring if it is small compared to the truss attached to it. But in some applications, the mass of the spring must be taken into account. Consider a spring of unstretched length l and mass M S uniformly distributed along the length of the spring. A mass m is attached to the end of the spring. One end of the spring is fixed and the mass m is allowed to vibrate horizontally without friction (Fig. 7–30). Each point on the spring moves with a velocity proportional to the distance from that point to the fixed end. For example, if the mass on the end moves with speed ϑ 0 , the midpoint of the spring moves with speed ϑ 0 / 2 Show that the kinetic energy of the mass plus spring when the mass is moving with velocity ϑ is K = 1 2 M ϑ 2 where M = m 1 3 M S is the “effective mass” of the system. [ Hint : Let D be the total length of the stretched spring. Then the velocity of a mass d m of a spring of length d x located at x is ϑ ( x ) − ϑ 0 ( x / D ) . Note also d m = d x ( M S / D ) .] FIGURE 7-30 Problem 68.
(III) We usually neglect the mass of a spring if it is small compared to the truss attached to it. But in some applications, the mass of the spring must be taken into account. Consider a spring of unstretched length
l
and mass
M
S
uniformly distributed along the length of the spring. A mass
m
is attached to the end of the spring. One end of the spring is fixed and the mass m is allowed to vibrate horizontally without friction (Fig. 7–30). Each point on the spring moves with a velocity proportional to the distance from that point to the fixed end. For example, if the mass on the end moves with speed
ϑ
0
, the midpoint of the spring moves with speed
ϑ
0
/
2
Show that the kinetic energy of the mass plus spring when the mass is moving with velocity
ϑ
is
K
=
1
2
M
ϑ
2
where
M
=
m
1
3
M
S
is the “effective mass” of the system. [Hint: Let D be the total length of the stretched spring. Then the velocity of a mass
d
m
of a spring of length
d
x
located at
x
is
ϑ
(
x
)
−
ϑ
0
(
x
/
D
)
. Note also
d
m
=
d
x
(
M
S
/
D
)
.]
Curve Fitter
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FILE
DATA
FIT TYPE
FIT
Harmonic Motion X
us
0.45
mi
ce
0.4
0.35
0.3
0.25
0.2
Residuals Plot
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Plot Prediction Bounds None
VISUALIZATION
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COA Fourier
Equation
Fit Plot
x vs. t
-Harmonic Motion
a0+ a1*cos(x*w) +
b1*sin(x*w)
Number of terms
Center and scale
1
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Results
Value
Lower
Upper
0.15
a0
0.1586
0.1551
0.1620
a1
0.0163
0.0115
0.0211
0.1
b1
0.0011
-0.0093
0.0115
W
1.0473
0.9880
1.1066
2
8
10
t
12
14
16
18
20
Goodness of Fit
Value
Table of Fits
SSE
0.2671
Fit State Fit name
Data
Harmonic Motion x vs. t
Fit type
fourier1
R-square
0.13345
SSE
DFE
0.26712
296
Adj R-sq
0.12467
RMSE
0.030041
# Coeff
Valic
R-square
0.1335
4
DFE
296.0000
Adj R-sq
0.1247
RMSE
0.0300
What point on the spring or different masses should be the place to measure the displacement of the spring? For instance, should you measure to the bottom of the hanging masses?
Let's assume that the brightness of a field-emission electron gun is given by
β
=
4iB
π² d²α²
a) Assuming a gun brightness of 5x108 A/(cm²sr), if we want to have an electron beam with a
semi-convergence angle of 5 milliradian and a probe current of 1 nA, What will be the
effective source size? (5 points)
b) For the same electron gun, plot the dependence of the probe current on the parameter
(dpa) for α = 2, 5, and 10 milliradian, respectively. Hint: use nm as the unit for the
electron probe size and display the three plots on the same graph. (10 points)
Chapter 7 Solutions
Physics for Scientists & Engineers with Modern Physics [With Access Code]
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