Holding Up Under Stress. A string or rope will break apart if it is placed under too

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Holding Up Under Stress. A string or rope will break apart if it is placed under too much tensile stress [Eq. (11.8)]. Thicker ropes can withstand more tension without breaking because the thicker the rope, the greater the cross sectional area and the smaller the stress. One type of steel has density 7800 kg/m3 and will break if the tensile stress exceeds 7.0 X 10' N/m2. You want to make a guitar string from 4.0 g of this type of steel in use; the guitar string must be able to withstand a tension of 900 N without breaking. Your job is the following:
(a) Determine the maximum length and minimum radius the string can have.
(b) Determine the highest possible fundamental frequency of standing waves on this string, if the entire length of the string is free to vibrate.
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Fundamentals of Physics

ISBN: 978-0471758013

8th Extended edition

Authors: Jearl Walker, Halliday Resnick

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