tsig
a carbon based life-form
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2005
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Spring against spring.
Assume two springs 1 and 2!
Spring 1 has length L1 and spring constant C1 and spring 2 has length L2 and spring constant C2.
Spring 1 is fixed at one end and spring 2 is attached to the other end of spring 1.
A force F is applied to the free end of spring 2. What happens?
Evidently both springs compress and a reaction force -F develops at the fixed end of spring 1.
Compression d1 of spring 1 is d1 = F/C1
Compression d2 of spring 2 is d2 = F/C2
The energy E1 required to compress spring 1 is E1 = (d1)² C1/2
The energy E2 required to compress spring 2 is E2 = (d2)² C2/2
The total energy E to compress the two springs is E = E1 + E2
Now release spring 2 from spring 1.
Instead of applying a force to the two springs, spring 2 is now moving with a kinetic energy E and is colliding with the free end of spring 1. We assume a soft collision.
What happens then? Both springs compress as if a force F was applied to them and a reaction force -F develops at fixed end of spring 1.
What happens then? One possibility is that both springs decompress and that spring 2 bounces back! Another is that one of the springs break due to overload. A third possibility is that both springs break simultaneously but it is unlikely. If something breaks it is the weakest link.
What do you think?
Do springs float? Do buildings?