Road rules1 min ago
Perpetual Slinkies?
P.s. which would last the longest the slinky or the esculator?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by fennster. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The goal of creating a "perpetual motion machine" is that the energy is entirely conserved within a local closed loop, so that you give it shove to start things off and the locl system or machine preserves that energy and keeps going for ever without any other input from outside.
The escalator idea sounds a great trick if you can pull it off, you have to balance the speed of the moving stairs with the natural resonance of the spring slinky. It is fraught with problems because small factors (dirt, breeze etc.) could cause the slinky to veer off sideways or wobble on its eternal search for equilibrium and so affect its speed of action.
escalator steps are a different size to regular steps... i'd suggest having a larger radius than usual for the rings. experiment with a slinky on a stationary escalator, work out what the best material & size for the sliky are and time how long it takes to get to the bottom. then you want the speed of your escalator to be the same as the average speed of your slinky
if you actually do this & get it to work, film it for us!
Hi Fennster all good questions get people thinking. Remember that a good theory in science - you have to get more out than you put in (to the theory)
1. Select escalator and slinkie.
2. measure rate at which slinkie descends on a stopped escalator. let us call this rate -x der daaah! in some unit or other. (metric) metres/sec
3. Set escalator to go up at x metres/s and video the result.
In fact my prediction is....an ordinary slinkie is getting its energy from going down (pgh and so on) whereas a slinkie on an escalator is going to get some of its energy from the motion (1/2 mv2) -so it should accelerate. hence the video - I would be interested to se e the result.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.