Imagine that you have an indestructible boxcar sitting on frictionless railroad track. The boxcar has length L, height H, and width W. It has N cannonballs of radius R and mass M stacked up against one end. If I move the cannonballs in any fashion – slowly carrying them, rolling them, firing them out of a cannon – what is the furthest I can move the boxcar along the rails? Which method should I use to move the boxcar the furthest? Assume that the inside walls are perfectly absorbing, so that collisions are perfectly inelastic.
Part A
Solution One
System:
Interactions:
Model:
Approach:
Diagrammatic Representation
The system consists of the Boxcar on rails and the Cannonballs, plus whatever devices we use for propulsion inside.There are thus no external influences
Mathematical Representation
Since there are no external influences, which includes forces, the center of mass of the system is not affected, and by the Law of Conservation of momentum must remain fixed. .
\begin
[\ M_
x_
+ \sum M_
x_
= M_
x_
+ \sum M_
x_
]\end
Here xi is the position of the center of the *i*th cannonball and xBoxcar is the position of the center of the boxcar. The subscripts initial and final indicate the positions at the start and the end of our operation.
Re-arranging, we get that the final boxcar position is:
\begin
[ x_
= x_
+ \frac{\sum{M_
x_{i, initial}} - \sum{M_
x_
}}{M_{Boxcar}} ]\end
\begin
[ x_
= x_
- \frac{M_{i}}{M_{Boxcar}} ( \sum{x_{i, final}} - \sum{x_{i, initial}}) ]\end
The Boxcar shifts to one side by the
Part B
Now consider the intermediate stages as the cannonballs are moved slowly, one by one, from one side to the other. How does the car move as each ball is shifted?
Solution
System:
Interactions:
Model:
Approach:
Diagrammatic Representation
Mathematical Representation
We calculate the Center of Mass as each Cannonball is shifted from one side to the other. Assume that each ball moves from as close to one side of the boxcar to as far one the other side as it can go.
\begin
[\sum F_
= F_
\cos\theta - N = ma_
]
[ \sum F_
= F_
\sin\theta - mg = ma_
]\end
\begin
[ N = F_
\cos\theta = \mbox
]\end
Part C
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Now imagine that the cannonballs are fired from one end to the other, one by one. What are the equations of motion during and after, and how does the car move along?
Solution
System:
Interactions:
Model:
Approach:
Diagrammatic Representation
Mathematical Representation
We write the equations of motion for the boxcar (with the rest of the cannonballs) and the one fired cannonball.
\begin
[\sum F_
= F_
\cos\theta = ma_
]
[ \sum F_
= F_
\sin\theta - mg - N = ma_
]\end
\begin
[ F_
\sin\theta - mg - N = 0 ]\end
\begin
[ N = F_
\sin\theta - mg = \mbox
]\end