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This is so embarrassing...I got this same question wrong 2x...so I'm gonna introduce it to the forum so this NEVER happens to me again.
When a spring is compressed to its minimum length and NOT permitted to expand:
A. potential energy is at its max and kinetic energy at its min
B. kinetic energy is at its max and potential energy is at its min (Thanks milski for the Edit!)
C. the sum of potential energy and kinetic energy is zero
D. potential energy and kinetic energy are at their minimum.
Highlight here for answer :A
2 Q:
1. Does the fact that it's not permitted to expand have any special consequence?
2. Also, is there any spring-mass scenario where C could hold true? If the spring was at an equilibrium without any external forces, would the total energy equal 0 then?
When a spring is compressed to its minimum length and NOT permitted to expand:
A. potential energy is at its max and kinetic energy at its min
B. kinetic energy is at its max and potential energy is at its min (Thanks milski for the Edit!)
C. the sum of potential energy and kinetic energy is zero
D. potential energy and kinetic energy are at their minimum.
Highlight here for answer :A
2 Q:
1. Does the fact that it's not permitted to expand have any special consequence?
2. Also, is there any spring-mass scenario where C could hold true? If the spring was at an equilibrium without any external forces, would the total energy equal 0 then?
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