home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: rec.puzzles,news.answers,rec.answers
- Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!spool.mu.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!uunet!questrel!chris
- From: chris@questrel.com (Chris Cole)
- Subject: rec.puzzles Archive (physics), part 27 of 35
- Message-ID: <puzzles/archive/physics_745653851@questrel.com>
- Followup-To: rec.puzzles
- Summary: This is part of an archive of questions
- and answers that may be of interest to
- puzzle enthusiasts.
- Part 1 contains the index to the archive.
- Read the rec.puzzles FAQ for more information.
- Sender: chris@questrel.com (Chris Cole)
- Reply-To: archive-comment@questrel.com
- Organization: Questrel, Inc.
- References: <puzzles/archive/Instructions_745653851@questrel.com>
- Date: Wed, 18 Aug 1993 06:06:29 GMT
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: Thu, 1 Sep 1994 06:04:11 GMT
- Lines: 470
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu rec.puzzles:25014 news.answers:11534 rec.answers:1934
-
- Archive-name: puzzles/archive/physics
- Last-modified: 17 Aug 1993
- Version: 4
-
-
- ==> physics/balloon.p <==
- A helium-filled balloon is tied to the floor of a car that makes a
- sharp right turn. Does the balloon tilt while the turn is made?
- If so, which way? The windows are closed so there is no connection
- with the outside air.
-
- ==> physics/balloon.s <==
- Because of buoyancy, the helium balloon on the string will want to move
- in the direction opposite the effective gravitational field existing
- in the car. Thus, when the car turns the corner, the balloon will
- deflect towards the inside of the turn.
-
- ==> physics/brick.p <==
- What is the maximum overhang you can create with an infinite supply of bricks?
-
- ==> physics/brick.s <==
- You can create an infinite overhang.
-
- Let us reverse the problem: how far can brick 1 be from brick 0?
-
- Let us assume that the brick is of length 1.
-
- To determine the place of the center of mass a(n):
- a(1)=1/2
- a(n)=1/n[(n-1)*a(n-1)+[a(n-1)+1/2]]=a(n-1)+1/(2n)
- Thus
- n 1 n 1
- a(n)=Sum -- = 1/2 Sum - = 1/2 H(n)
- m=1 2m m=1 m
- Needless to say the limit for n->oo of half the Harmonic series is oo.
-
- ==> physics/bubbles.p <==
- In a universe with the same physical laws, but which is mostly water
- with little bubbles in it, do the bubbles attract, repel, or what?
-
- ==> physics/bubbles.s <==
- A bubble should produce a gravitational field that is the negative of
- that produced by an equal volume of water in an empty universe. This is
- because a point in space would be affected only by the water in the
- symmetric image of the bubble with respect to that point. The effect
- on another bubble in that field would be to attract that bubble since
- it would be pushing the water around it away. Therefore, the bubbles
- should attract.
-
- ==> physics/cannonball.p <==
- A person in a boat drops a cannonball overboard; does the water level change?
-
- ==> physics/cannonball.s <==
- The cannonball in the boat displaces an amount of water equal to the MASS
- of the cannonball. The cannonball in the water displaces an amount of water
- equal to the VOLUME of the cannonball. Water is unable to support the
- level of salinity it would take to make it as dense as a cannonball, so the
- first amount is definitely more than the second amount, and the water level
- drops.
-
- ==> physics/magnets.p <==
- You have two bars of iron. One is magnetized along its length, the
- other is not. Without using any other instrument (thread, filings,
- other magnets, etc.), find out which is which.
-
- ==> physics/magnets.s <==
- Take the two bars, and put them together like a T, so that one bisects the
- other.
- ___________________
- bar A ---> |___________________|
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- bar B ------------> | |
- | |
- | |
- |_|
-
- If they stick together, then bar B is the magnet. If they don't, bar A is
- the magnet. (reasoning follows)
-
- Bar magnets are "dead" in their centers (i.e., there is no magnetic force,
- since the two poles cancel out). So, if bar A is the magnet, then bar B
- won't stick to its center.
-
- However, bar magnets are quite "alive" at their edges (i.e., the magnetic
- force is concentrated). So, if bar B is the magnet, then bar A will stick
- nicely to its end.
-
- ==> physics/milk.and.coffee.p <==
- You are just served a hot cup of coffee and want it to be as hot as
- possible later. If you like milk in your coffee, should you add it
- when you get the cup or just before you drink it?
-
- ==> physics/milk.and.coffee.s <==
- Normalize your temperature scale so that 0 degrees = room temperature.
-
- Assume that the coffee cools at a rate proportional to the difference
- in temperature, and that the amount of milk is sufficiently small that
- the constant of proportinality is not changed when you add the milk.
-
- An early calculus homework problem is to compute that the temperature
- of the coffee decays exponentially with time,
-
- T(t) = exp(-ct) T0, where T0 = temperature at t=0.
-
- Let l = exp(-ct), where t is the duration of the experiment.
-
- Assume that the difference in specific heats of coffee and milk are
- negligible, so that if you add milk at temperature M to coffee at
- temperature C, you get a mix of temperature aM+bC, where a and b
- are constants between 0 and 1, with a+b=1. (Namely, a = the fraction
- of final volume that is milk, and b = fraction that is coffee.)
-
- If we let C denote the original coffee temperature and M the milk
- temperature, we see that
-
- Add milk later: aM + blC
- Add milk now: l(aM+bC) = laM+blC
-
- The difference is d=(1-l)aM. Since l<1 and a>0, we need to worry about
- whether M is positive or not.
-
- M>0: Warm milk. So d>0, and adding milk later is better.
- M=0: Room temp. So d=0, and it doesn't matter.
- M<0: Cold milk. So d<0, and adding milk now is better.
-
- Of course, if you wanted to be intuitive, the answer is obvious if you
- assume the coffee is already at room temperature and the milk is
- either scalding hot or subfreezing cold.
-
- Moral of the story: Always think of extreme cases when doing these puzzles.
- They are usually the key.
-
- Oh, by the way, if we are allowed to let the milk stand at room
- temperature, then let r = the corresponding exponential decay constant
- for your milk container.
-
- Add acclimated milk later: arM + blC
-
- We now have lots of cases, depending on whether
-
- r<l: The milk pot is larger than your coffee cup.
- (E.g, it really is a pot.)
- r>l: The milk pot is smaller than your coffee cup.
- (E.g., it's one of those tiny single-serving things.)
- M>0: The milk is warm.
- M<0: The milk is cold.
-
- Leaving out the analysis, I compute that you should...
-
- Add warm milk in large pots LATER.
- Add warm milk in small pots NOW.
- Add cold milk in large pots NOW.
- Add cold milk in small pots LATER.
-
- Of course, observe that the above summary holds for the case where the
- milk pot is allowed to acclimate; just treat the pot as of infinite
- size.
-
- ==> physics/mirror.p <==
- Why does a mirror appear to invert the left-right directions, but not up-down?
-
- ==> physics/mirror.s <==
- Mirrors invert front to back, not left to right.
-
- The popular misconception of the inversion is caused by the fact that
- a person when looking at another person expects him/her to face her/him,
- so with the left-hand side to the right. When facing oneself (in the
- mirror) one sees an 'uninverted' person.
-
- See Martin Gardner, ``Hexaflexagons and other mathematical
- diversions,'' University of Chicago Press 1988, Chapter 16. A letter
- by R.D. Tschigi and J.L. Taylor published in this book states that the
- fundamental reason is: ``Human beings are superficially and grossly
- bilaterally symmetrical, but subjectively and behaviorally they are
- relatively asymmetrical. The very fact that we can distinguish our
- right from our left side implies an asymettry of the perceiving
- system, as noted by Ernst Mach in 1900. We are thus, to a certain
- extent, an asymmetrical mind dwelling in a bilaterally symmetrical
- body, at least with respect to a casual visual inspection of our
- external form.''
-
- Martin Gardner has also written the book ``The Ambidextrous Universe.''
-
- ==> physics/monkey.p <==
- Hanging over a pulley there is a rope, with a weight at one end.
- At the other end hangs a monkey of equal weight. What happens if
- the monkey starts to ascend the rope? Assume that the mass of the
- rope and pulley are negligible, and the pulley is frictionless.
-
- ==> physics/monkey.s <==
- The monkey is pulling down on the rope hard enough to pull itself up. This
- increases the tension in the rope just enough to cause the weight to rise at
- the same rate as the monkey, since they are of equal mass.
-
- ==> physics/pole.in.barn.p <==
- Accelerate a pole of length l to a constant speed of 90% of the speed of
- light (.9c). Move this pole towards an open barn of length .9l (90%
- the length of the pole). Then, as soon as the pole is fully inside the
- barn, close the door. What do you see and what actually happens?
-
- ==> physics/pole.in.barn.s <==
- What the observer sees depends upon where the observer is, due to
- the finite speed of light.
-
- For definiteness, assume the forward end of the pole is marked "A" and
- the after end is marked "B". Let's also assume there is a light source
- inside the barn, and that the pole stops moving as soon as end "B" is
- inside the barn.
-
- An observer inside the barn next to the door will see the following
- sequence of events:
-
- 1. End "A" enters the barn and continues toward the back.
- 2. End "B" enters the barn and stops in front of the observer.
- 3. The door closes.
- 4. End "A" continues moving and penetrates the barn at the far end.
- 5. End "A" stops outside the barn.
-
- An observer at the other end of the barn will see:
-
- 1. End "A" enters the barn.
- 2. End "A" passes the observer and penetrates the back of the barn.
- 3. If the pole has markings on it, the observer will notice the part
- nearest him has stopped moving. However, both ends are still
- moving.
- 4. End "A" stops moving outside the barn.
- 5. End "B" continues moving until it enters the barn and then stops.
- 6. The door closes.
-
- After the observers have subtracted out the effects of the finite speed
- of light on what they see, both observers will agree on what happened:
- The pole entered the barn; the door closed so that the pole was
- completely contained within the barn; as the pole was being stopped it
- elongated and penetrated the back wall of the barn.
-
- Things are different if you are riding along with the pole. The pole
- is never inside the barn since it won't fit. End A of the pole penetrates
- the rear wall of the barn before the door is closed.
-
- If the wall of the barn is impenetrable, in all the above scenarios insert
- the wording "End A of the pole explodes" for "End A penetrates the barn."
-
- ==> physics/resistors.p <==
- What is the resistance between various pairs of vertices on a lattice
- of unit resistors in the shape of a
- 1. Cube,
- 2. Platonic solid,
- 3. N dimensional Hypercube,
- 4. Infinite square lattice,
- and
- 5. between two small terminals on a continuous sheet?
-
- ==> physics/resistors.s <==
- 1. Cube
-
- The key idea is to observe that if you can show that two
- points in a circuit must be at the same potential, then you can
- connect them, and no current will flow through the connection and the
- overall properties of the circuit remain unchanged. In particular, for
- the cube, there are three resistors leaving the two "connection
- corners". Since the cube is completely symmetrical with respect to the
- three resistors, the far sides of the resistors may be connected
- together. And so we end up with:
-
- |---WWWWWW---| |---WWWWWW---| |---WWWWWW---|
- | | |---WWWWWW---| | |
- *--+---WWWWWW---+-+---WWWWWW---+-+---WWWWWW---+---*
- | | |---WWWWWW---| | |
- |---WWWWWW---| |---WWWWWW---| |---WWWWWW---|
- |---WWWWWW---|
-
- This circuit has resistance 5/6 times the resistance of one resistor.
-
- 2. Platonic Solids
-
- Same idea for 8, 12 and 20, since you use the symmetry to identify
- equi-potential points. The tetrahedron is a hair more subtle:
-
- *---|---WWWWWW---|---*
- |\ /|
- W W W W
- W W W W
- W W W W
- | \ / |
- \ || |
- \ | /
- \ W /
- \ W / <-------
- \ W /
- \|/
- +
-
- By symmetry, the endpoints of the marked resistor are equi-potential. Hence
- they can be connected together, and so it becomes a simple:
-
- *---+---WWWWW---+----*
- | |
- +-WWW WWW-+
- | |-| |
- |-WWW WWW-|
-
- 3. Hypercube
-
- Think of injecting a constant current I into the start vertex.
- It splits (by symmetry) into n equal currents in the n arms; the current of
- I/n then splits into I/n(n-1), which then splits into I/[n(n-1)(n-1)] and so
- on till the halfway point, when these currents start adding up. What is the
- voltage difference between the antipodal points? V = I x R; add up the voltages
- along any of the paths:
- n even: (n-2)/2
- V = 2{I/n + I/(n(n-1)) + I/(n(n-1)(n-1)) + ... + I/(n(n-1) )}
-
- n odd: (n-3)/2
- V = 2{I/n + I/(n(n-1)) + I/(n(n-1)(n-1)) + ... + I/(n(n-1) )} (n-1)/2
- + I/(n(n-1) )
- And R = V/I i.e. replace the Is in the above expression by 1s.
-
- For the 3-cube: R = 2{1/3} + 1/(3x2) = 5/6 ohm
- For the 4-cube: R = 2{1/4 + 1/(4x3)} = 2/3 ohm
-
- This formula yields the resistance from root to root of
- two (n-1)-ary trees of height n/2 with their end nodes identified
- (-when n is even; something similar when n is odd).
- Coincidentally, the 4-cube is such an animal and thus the answer
- 2/3 ohms is correct in that case.
- However, it does not provide the solution for n >= 5, as the hypercube
- does not have quite as many edges as were counted in the formula above.
-
- 4. The Infinite Plane
-
- For an infinite lattice: First inject a constant current I at a point; figure
- out the current flows (with heavy use of symmetry). Remove that current. Draw
- out a current I from the other point of interest (or inject a negative current)
- and figure out the flows (identical to earlier case, but displaced and in the
- other direction). By the principle of superposition, if you inject a current I
- into point a and take out a current I at point b at the same time, the currents
- in the paths are simply the sum of the currents obtained in the earlier two
- simpler cases. As in the n-cube, find the voltage between the points of
- interest, divide by I and voila`!
-
- As an illustration, in the adjacent points case: we have a current of I/4 in
- each of the four resistors:
-
- ^ |
- | v
- <--o--> -->o<--
- | ^
- v |
- (inject) (take out)
- And adding the currents, we have I/2 in the resistor connecting the two points.
- Therefore V=(1 ohm) x I/2 and effective resistance between the points = 1/2 ohm.
-
- We do not derive it, but the equivalent resistance between two nodes k
- diagonal units apart is (2/pi)(1+1/3+1/5+...+1/(2k-1)); that, plus
- symmetry and the known equivalent resistance between two adjacent
- nodes, is sufficient to derive all equivalent resistances in the
- lattice.
-
- 5. Continuous sheet
-
- I think the answer is (rho/dz)log(L/r)/pi where rho is the resistivity,
- dz is the sheet thickness, L is the separation, r is the terminal radius.
-
- cf. "Random Walks and Electric Networks", by Doyle and Snell, published by the
- Mathematical Association of America.
-
- ==> physics/sail.p <==
- A sailor is in a sailboat on a river. The current is 3 knots with respect
- to the land. The wind (air velocity) is zero, with respect to the
- land. The sailor wants to proceed downriver as quickly as possible,
- maximizing his downstream speed with respect to the land.
-
- Should he raise the sail, or not?
-
- ==> physics/sail.s <==
- Depends on the sail. If the boat is square-rigged, then not, since
- raising the sail will simply increase the air resistance.
-
- If the sailor has a fore-and-aft rig, then he should, since he can then
- tack into the wind. (Imagine the boat in still water with a 3-knot head
- wind).
-
- ==> physics/shoot.sun.p <==
- If you are standing at the equator at sunrise, where must you point a laser
- cannon to hit the Sun dead center? Assume that the Sun is stationary and
- that the Earth's orbit around it is circular.
-
- ==> physics/shoot.sun.s <==
- You aim it at the horizon. The sun is exactly in the place where it
- appears to be. It is true that the sun wasn't on the horizon 8 minutes
- ago (the specific number is 2 degrees), when it emitted the light you
- are now seeing. However, "the sun wasn't on the horizon" doesn't mean
- the sun moved; it means the horizon moved.
-
- ==> physics/skid.p <==
- What is the fastest way to make a 90 degree turn on a slippery road?
-
- ==> physics/skid.s <==
- For higher speeds (measured at a small distance from the point of initiation
- of a sharp turn) the fastest way round is to "outside loop" - that is, steer
- away from the curve, and do a skidding 270.
-
- This technique is taught in advanced driving schools.
-
- References:
-
- M. Freeman and P. Palffy, American Journal of Physics, vol 50, p. 1098, 1982.
- P. Palffy and Unruh, American Journal of Physics, vol 49, p. 685, 1981.
-
- ==> physics/spheres.p <==
- Two spheres are the same size and weight, but one is hollow. They are
- each made of uniform material, though of course not the same material.
- With a minimum of apparatus, how can I tell which is hollow?
-
- ==> physics/spheres.s <==
- Since the balls have equal diameter and equal mass, their volume and
- density are also equal. However, the mass distribution is not equal,
- so they will have different moments of inertia - the hollow sphere has
- its mass concentrated at the outer edge, so its moment of inertia will
- be greater than the solid sphere. Applying a known torque and observing
- which sphere has the largest angular acceleration will determine which
- is which. An easy way to do this is to "race" the spheres down an
- inclined plane with enough friction to prevent the spheres from sliding.
- Then, by conservation of energy:
-
- mgh = 1/2 mv^2 + 1/2 Iw^2
-
- Since the spheres are rolling without sliding, there is a relationship
- between velocity and angular velocity:
-
- w = v / r
-
- so
-
- mgh = 1/2 mv^2 + 1/2 I (v^2 / r^2) = 1/2 (m + I/r^2) v^2
-
- and
-
- v^2 = 2mgh / (m + I / r^2)
-
- From this we can see that the sphere with larger moment of inertia (I) will
- have a smaller velocity when rolled from the same height, if mass and radius
- are equal with the other sphere. Thus the solid sphere will roll faster.
-
- ==> physics/wind.p <==
- Is a round-trip by airplane longer or shorter if there is wind blowing?
-
- ==> physics/wind.s <==
- It will take longer, by the ratio (s^2)/(s^2 - w^2) where s is the
- plane's speed, and w is the wind speed. The stronger the wind the
- longer it will take, up until the wind speed equals the plane's speed,
- at which point the plane will run out of fuel before too long.
-
- Math:
- s = plane's speed
- w = wind speed
- d = distance in one direction
-
- d / (s + w) = time to complete leg flying with the wind
- d / (s - w) = time to complete leg flying against the wind
- d / (s + w) + d / (s - w) = round trip time
-
- d / (s + w) + d / (s - w) = ratio of flying with wind to
- ------------------------- flying with no wind (bottom of
- d / s + d / s equation is top with w = 0)
-
- this simplifies to s^2 / (s^2 - w^2).
-