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Introduction to SAT II Physics - FreeExamPapers

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elative <strong>to</strong> the other. In this cases, it is important <strong>to</strong> remember that the center of mass of the system<br />

as a whole doesn’t move.<br />

EXAMPLE<br />

A fisherman stands at the back of a perfectly symmetrical boat of length L. The boat is at rest in the<br />

middle of a perfectly still and peaceful lake, and the fisherman has a mass 1 / 4 that of the boat. If the<br />

fisherman walks <strong>to</strong> the front of the boat, by how much is the boat displaced?<br />

If you’ve ever tried <strong>to</strong> walk from one end of a small boat <strong>to</strong> the other, you may have noticed that<br />

the boat moves backward as you move forward. That’s because there are no external forces acting<br />

on the system, so the system as a whole experiences no net force. If we recall the equation<br />

, the center of mass of the system cannot move if there is no net force acting on the<br />

system. The fisherman can move, the boat can move, but the system as a whole must maintain the<br />

same center of mass. Thus, as the fisherman moves forward, the boat must move backward <strong>to</strong><br />

compensate for his movement.<br />

Because the boat is symmetrical, we know that the center of mass of the boat is at its geometrical<br />

center, at x = L / 2 . Bearing this in mind, we can calculate the center of mass of the system<br />

containing the fisherman and the boat:<br />

Now let’s calculate where the center of mass of the fisherman-boat system is relative <strong>to</strong> the boat<br />

after the fisherman has moved <strong>to</strong> the front. We know that the center of mass of the fisherman-boat<br />

system hasn’t moved relative <strong>to</strong> the water, so its displacement with respect <strong>to</strong> the boat represents<br />

how much the boat has been displaced with respect <strong>to</strong> the water.<br />

In the figure below, the center of mass of the boat is marked by a dot, while the center of mass of<br />

the fisherman-boat system is marked by an x.<br />

132

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