A rope pulled at constant rate over a horizontal bar drags a weight across a frictionless floor; find its speed, acceleration, and the angle at which it lifts off.
Solution by Jaan Kalda.
Part i) (1 point)
Place the bar at the origin of a coordinate system where x is the horizontal distance from the bar to the weight along the floor, and H is the height of the bar above the floor. The length of the bar-to-weight rope segment is
L=x2+H2,sinα=x/L.
Method 1 (inextensibility / velocity projection). Since the rope is inextensible, the velocity components of its two endpoints along the rope direction must match: whatever rate one end recedes from a point on the rope, the other end must approach it at the same rate. The puller’s hand pulls the rope along its own direction at speed v, so the rope shortens at rate v. The weight moves horizontally toward the bar at speed u; its velocity component along the rope (which makes angle α with the vertical, hence angle π/2−α with the floor) is usinα. Equating:
usinα=v⟹u=sinαv.
Method 2 (implicit differentiation). Differentiating L2=x2+H2 with respect to time:
LL˙=xx˙.
With L˙=−v (the segment shortens at constant rate) and sinα=x/L:
x˙=−xLv=−sinαv,u=∣x˙∣=sinαv.
Grading (Method 1)
Recognising that the velocity components of the rope endpoints along the rope direction must match (rope inextensibility): 0.4 pts
Identifying the projection usinα for the weight’s velocity along the rope: 0.3 pts
Final answer u=v/sinα: 0.3 pts
Grading (Method 2)
Setting up L2=x2+H2 with L˙=−v: 0.3 pts
Correctly differentiating to obtain LL˙=xx˙: 0.4 pts
Final answer u=v/sinα: 0.3 pts
Part ii) (1 point)
Method 1 (continuing from LL˙=xx˙). Differentiate again, with L˙=−v constant (so L¨=0):
L˙2=x˙2+xx¨,x¨=xv2−x˙2=xv2−u2.
Since u2>v2, we have x¨<0: the weight accelerates toward the bar. With u=v/sinα and x=Htanα:
Correctly differentiating an incorrect result from the previous part: 0.5 pts
Method 2 (direct differentiation of u=v/sinα). The angle α changes in time as the weight slides; introduce ω=−α˙ (positive as α decreases). The weight’s position is x=Htanα, so its speed is
u=−x˙=−cos2αHα˙=cos2αHω.
Combined with u=v/sinα:
ω=Hucos2α=Hsinαvcos2α.
Differentiating u=v/sinα with respect to time:
u˙=−sin2αvcosαα˙=sin2αvωcosα.
Substituting ω:
∣x¨∣=u˙=sin2αvcosα⋅Hsinαvcos2α=Hv2cot3α.
Grading (Method 1)
Differentiating LL˙=xx˙ to obtain x¨=(v2−u2)/x: 0.5 pts
Substituting u and x to obtain final answer a=(v2/H)cot3α: 0.5 pts
Grading (Method 2)
Introducing ω=−α˙ as the angular rate of the rope direction: 0.2 pts
Relating the weight’s speed to ω: u=Hω/cos2α: 0.2 pts
Deriving ω=vcos2α/(Hsinα) from u=v/sinα: 0.2 pts
Differentiating u=v/sinα to obtain u˙=vωcosα/sin2α: 0.2 pts
Substituting ω and obtaining final answer a=(v2/H)cot3α: 0.2 pts
Part iii) (3 points)
While the weight is on the floor, the only horizontal force on it is the horizontal component of the rope tension Tsinα directed toward the bar. Newton’s second law in the horizontal direction:
Tsinα=M∣x¨∣=Hsin3αMv2cos3α,T=Hsin4αMv2cos3α.
Vertically, Tcosα+N=Mg, where N is the normal force from the floor. The weight lifts off when N=0, i.e., Tcosα0=Mg: