1. Flying Dumbbell 10 pts

Mechanics · Elasticity, Oscillations, Collisions, Rigid-body rotation

Dynamics of a steel dumbbell in zero gravity — longitudinal oscillations and wall collisions at various angles of incidence.

Self-assessment by Claude Opus 4.7. 10.0 / 10.0

Part (i) — 2.0 / 2.0 pts

CriterionPointsResult
Explaining that oscillation is symmetric around centre of the rod (invoking Newton’s third law suffices)0.5✓ “By symmetry of the dumbbell about its midpoint, in the centre-of-mass frame the centre of the rod is stationary during the breathing oscillation”
Expressing stiffness of half-rod0.5k=YA/(l/2)=2YA/lk = YA/(l/2) = 2YA/l, with the factor-of-two pitfall called out explicitly
Mass of the ball m=43πr3ρm = \tfrac{4}{3}\pi r^{3}\rho0.2✓ stated and evaluated as 3.27×102kg\approx 3.27\times 10^{-2}\,\text{kg}
Realising that the system can be treated as a spring0.3✓ a priori check mrod/m0.02m_\mathrm{rod}/m \approx 0.02 justifies “the rod is a massless elastic spring connecting two heavy balls”
Oscillation period T=2πm/kT = 2\pi\sqrt{m/k}0.3T=2πml/(2YA)T = 2\pi\sqrt{ml/(2YA)}
Final answer0.2T6.4×104s0.64msT \approx 6.4\times 10^{-4}\,\text{s} \approx 0.64\,\text{ms}, matching the official

Part (ii) — 2.0 / 2.0 pts

Scored against the “Solution 1” (compression-wave) grading column, which is the route Claude takes.

CriterionPointsResult
Realise compressed ball is essentially a compression wave0.5✓ “a compression wave is launched into the ball at the speed of sound… the wave traverses the ball, reflects from the far surface, and returns”
Formula for speed of sound0.5c=Y/ρ5.06×103m s1c = \sqrt{Y/\rho} \approx 5.06\times 10^{3}\,\text{m s}^{-1}
Relation between time, radius and speed0.5τ2r/c=2rρ/Y\tau \sim 2r/c = 2r\sqrt{\rho/Y}
Final answer0.5τ4μs\tau \approx 4\,\mu\text{s}, matching the official

Part (iii) — 2.0 / 2.0 pts

CriterionPointsResult
2 hits0.4✓ Phase 1 first contact and Phase 3 second contact at tT/2t \approx T/2
Velocity of front ball flips almost instantaneously0.4✓ “near-vertical jump from v-v to +v+v over time τT\tau\ll T” at both contacts
Centre of mass stays at rest0.4vCoM=0\vec v_{\mathrm{CoM}} = 0 stated explicitly between bounces
Sinusoidal movement of front ball0.4vF,x(t)=vcos(ωt)v_{F,x}(t) = v\cos(\omega t) over 0<t<T/20 < t < T/2
Constant velocity v-v of front ball after second hit0.4✓ — the grading scheme has a sign typo (should read +v+v); Claude’s ”t>T/2t > T/2: flat at +v+v” matches the official’s own narrative which says “both balls move away from the wall with the same velocity +v+v

Part (iv) — 2.0 / 2.0 pts

CriterionPointsResult
Realise it behaves as in previous question (balls at velocity v-v and vv, CM at rest), but it now also rotates and oscillates around centre of mass0.5✓ “front ball is at l2n^0-\tfrac{l}{2}\hat n_{0} moving at (+v,0)(+v,0), and the rear at +l2n^0+\tfrac{l}{2}\hat n_{0} moving at (v,0)(-v,0)” + “CoM goes from velocity vx^-v\hat x to rest” + explicit “Decomposition: rotation + breathing”
Expression for the angular speed of rotation0.3Ω=2vsinα/l\Omega = 2v\sin\alpha/l derived from vFvR=Ω×(rFrR)\vec v_F - \vec v_R = \vec\Omega\times(\vec r_F - \vec r_R)
Expression of the amplitude of oscillations0.2uF(t)=(vcosα/ω)sin(ωt)u_F(t) = (v\cos\alpha/\omega)\sin(\omega t), amplitude vcosα/ωv\cos\alpha/\omega
Realise the difference in interaction is whether the first ball bounces once or twice0.2✓ “two (or more) collisions” for α<α0\alpha < \alpha_0 vs “no second collision of the front ball occurs” for α>α0\alpha > \alpha_0
Formula for the distance of the front ball to the wall over time0.3xF(t)l2sinαΩt+uF(t)cosαx_F(t) \approx \tfrac{l}{2}\sin\alpha\cdot\Omega t + u_F(t)\cos\alpha, derived by linearising cos(α+Ωt)\cos(\alpha+\Omega t)
Realise that if the distance is over 0 for all t>0t > 0 the first ball does not hit the wall twice0.2✓ “the equation has a positive solution iff tan2α0.217\tan^{2}\alpha \le 0.217… For tan2α>0.217\tan^{2}\alpha > 0.217 the curve never reaches the line and no second collision occurs”
Finding the critical angle given this condition0.3α0=arctan0.217250.436rad\alpha_0 = \arctan\sqrt{0.217} \approx 25^{\circ} \approx 0.436\,\text{rad}, matching the official

Part (v) — 2.0 / 2.0 pts

CriterionPointsResult
Realise that the dumbbell rotates around its centre of mass (after first collision)0.2Ω=2vsinα/l\Omega = 2v\sin\alpha/l “(counterclockwise), unchanged” between contacts
Realise that the longitudinal oscillations have decayed by the time of the second collision0.4✓ “the rod’s breathing dies away to heat… Rod stress: zero (oscillations dissipated)“
Expression for velocity of ball vsinαv\sin\alpha0.5vR(t2)=vsinα(sinα,cosα)\vec v_R(t_2^-) = v\sin\alpha(-\sin\alpha, -\cos\alpha), magnitude vsinαv\sin\alpha
Expression for the component of velocity of ball in direction of surface normal vsin2αv\sin^2\alpha0.5vR,x=vsin2αv_{R,x} = -v\sin^2\alpha, reversed by the impulse to +vsin2α+v\sin^2\alpha
Realise the component of velocity of second ball in direction of surface normal is also vsin2αv\sin^2\alpha0.2✓ rigid rotation gives vF(t2)=(vsin2α,vsinαcosα)\vec v_F(t_2) = (v\sin^2\alpha, v\sin\alpha\cos\alpha), the front ball’s vxv_x component matches by construction
Realise the speed of the centre of mass vsin2αv\sin^2\alpha0.2vCoMafter=(vsin2α,0)\vec v_\mathrm{CoM}^\mathrm{after} = (v\sin^2\alpha, 0), magnitude vsin2αv\sin^2\alpha

Overall score: 10.0 / 10.0 pts — full marks

The five requested numerical answers all match the official key: T0.64msT \approx 0.64\,\text{ms} in Part (i), τ4μs\tau \approx 4\,\mu\text{s} in Part (ii), the two-bounce trace with T/2T/2 separation in Part (iii), α0=arctan0.21725\alpha_0 = \arctan\sqrt{0.217} \approx 25^{\circ} in Part (iv), and vCoM=vsin2αv_\mathrm{CoM} = v\sin^2\alpha in Part (v).

Commentary

Where this solution goes beyond the grading scheme. The opening “Overview” frames everything around the timescale hierarchy τl/cT\tau \ll l/c \ll T with all three numerics stated up-front, so each later impulse-approximation step is justified by name rather than rederived in place. Part (i) carries an a posteriori validation that ωl0.20c\omega l \approx 0.20\,c stays well below the rod’s lowest standing-wave frequency, closing the loop on the massless-rod approximation. Part (ii) explicitly anchors the ωτ0.04rad\omega\tau \approx 0.04\,\text{rad} smallness and τ<l/c\tau < l/c no-transit-during-contact arguments that the rest of the solution leans on. Part (iii) appends an energy-and-momentum table verifying that the wall delivers 4mv4mv split evenly across the two bounces with KE preserved at every step, plus an “educational remark — why two bounces, not one” that contrasts the elastic dumbbell against a rigid one and gives the T0T \to 0 limit. Part (iv) explicitly identifies two small parameters of the same order (Ω/ω\Omega/\omega and vcosα/(ωl)v\cos\alpha/(\omega l)) before linearising, and includes a numerical refinement showing α0=24.992\alpha_0 = 24.992^{\circ} from the exact root of scoss=sinss\cos s = \sin s. Part (v) carries an energy-budget breakdown (cos2α\cos^2\alpha to heat in the first decay; explicit rotational, translational, and second-decay heat fractions written out individually); a derivation of the new spin rate Ω=2vsinαcos2α/l\Omega' = 2v\sin\alpha\cos^2\alpha/l for the post-second-bounce motion, with the master equation sins/s=tan2α\sin s/s = -\tan^2\alpha shown to recur and to have no solution in the regime α>α0\alpha > \alpha_0 — a non-trivial self-consistency check that the rear ball does not re-bounce; and a “symmetry-broken bounce” remark connecting the sin2α\sin^2\alpha scaling to the slippage loss in a glancing tennis-racket collision. Multiple limits (α0\alpha \to 0, απ/2\alpha \to \pi/2, threshold αα0+0.179v\alpha \to \alpha_0^+ \approx 0.179\,v) are worked out in each part as sanity checks.

Where the official solution is sharper. Two places. (1) Part (i) closing form: the official packages the period as T=4π(r/d)2ρrl/(3Y)T = 4\pi(r/d)\sqrt{2\rho rl/(3Y)}, which exposes the ball-to-rod aspect ratio r/dr/d as the controlling dimensionless parameter — a reader sees immediately that the period scales linearly with the bluntness ratio of the dumbbell. Claude’s algebraically equivalent T=2π8r3lρ/(3Yd2)T = 2\pi\sqrt{8r^3 l\rho/(3Yd^2)} has the same content but obscures the geometric meaning. (2) Part (v) economy: the official derivation is dramatically shorter — it computes only the magnitude vsinαv\sin\alpha of the rear ball’s rigid-body velocity, projects onto the wall normal to get vsin2α-v\sin^2\alpha, reverses, and asserts the symmetry that gives both balls the same vxv_x, all in one paragraph. Claude’s explicit vector decomposition with n^(t2)=(cosα,sinα)\hat n(t_2) = (-\cos\alpha, \sin\alpha) and the yy-component cancellation argument is correct and arguably more rigorous on the front-ball step, but it is several times longer for the same conclusion. Note also a sign typo in the official grading scheme — “Constant velocity v-v of front ball after second hit” should read +v+v, as the official’s own solution body confirms; Claude’s solution gets this right and the typo does not affect scoring.