pizza
Mechanical
- Oct 12, 2001
- 23
Can someone help me with an explanation to a semmingly simple balancing problem. I would like to have some show me why a balance (or say a see-saw) returns to its equilibrium point mathematically speaking.
If you draw a simple diagram of a see-saw with the fulcrum at the center and two equal weights at equal distance from the fulcrum BUT the see-saw is not horizontal in the starting position, what torque imbalance is causing the see-saw to return to its balanced position? If you do the sum of the torques about the center fulcrum, the force vectors times the distance to the fulcrum, pointing downward, cancel eachother, don't they? So why wouldn't the balance just stay in the "out-of-horizontal" position. My reference x and y are each pointing horizontally to the right and vertically upward respectively.
How do you prove MATHEMATICALLY that the see-saw is NOT in equilibrium when initially positioned as described above?
Thanks for any help.
If you draw a simple diagram of a see-saw with the fulcrum at the center and two equal weights at equal distance from the fulcrum BUT the see-saw is not horizontal in the starting position, what torque imbalance is causing the see-saw to return to its balanced position? If you do the sum of the torques about the center fulcrum, the force vectors times the distance to the fulcrum, pointing downward, cancel eachother, don't they? So why wouldn't the balance just stay in the "out-of-horizontal" position. My reference x and y are each pointing horizontally to the right and vertically upward respectively.
How do you prove MATHEMATICALLY that the see-saw is NOT in equilibrium when initially positioned as described above?
Thanks for any help.