106k views
1 vote
A Hooke's law spring is compressed 12.0 cm from equilibrium, and the potential energy stored is 72.0 J. What compression (as measured from equilibrium) would result in 100 J being stored in this case?

User Shekhar
by
6.1k points

2 Answers

0 votes

Answer: 14.14 cm

Step-by-step explanation:

Here is an easier way to understand this.

The formula for spring potential energy is

Us = 1/2k (deltax)^2

k = spring constant

if you plug in 12 cm and 72 J

(and eliminate the k constant, because we're going to be looking at the same spring and it will cancel out (finding it will make it unnecessarily complicated, we want to find a ratio here; what compression would result in 100 J of potential energy?)

however,

you can see here that

72 = 1/2 (12.0)^2

and

72 = 72

so this is a 1:1 ratio directly related as according to HOOKES LAW

if you plug in

100 = 1/2(delta x)^2

you can easily solve for the one variable, and get 14.14 cm

User RyanKeeter
by
6.6k points
2 votes

Answer:14.14 cm

Step-by-step explanation:

Given

Spring Compression
x=12 cm

Potential energy Stored in spring
=72 J

Suppose k is the spring constant of spring

Potential Energy of spring is given by
=(kx^2)/(2)


(k(0.12)^2)/(2)=72


k(0.12)^2=144


k=10,000 N/m


k=10 kN/m

for 100 J energy


(k(x_0)^2)/(2)=100


10* 10^3\cdot (x_0)^2=200


(x_0)^2=2* 10^(-2)


x_0=0.1414


x_0=14.14 cm

User Ethan Harris
by
6.3k points