Thursday 28 March 2024
Font Size
   
Friday, 09 December 2011 18:17

Cannon Balls: Size Matters

Rate this item
(0 votes)

Cannon Balls: Size Matters

Surely you have heard about the MythBusters’ cannon accident by now. Underwire gives a nice summary.

Let me start with a couple of quick notes.

  • I think, for the most part, the MythBusters do a very nice job of staying safe. The seem to take all possible precautions. This can be a difficult thing when they are exploring unknown phenomena.
  • It is very fortunate that there were no injuries.
  • I am fairly certain that cannons have been fired at this location before. However, it is a bomb range and not an artillery range (I think).

And now for some analysis. That is what you really want, right? In this case, I think there are a few questions to consider:

  • How fast was the muzzle speed of the cannon ball?
  • Why do cannon balls go so much farther than a bullet shot at the same speed?
  • How do you stop a cannon ball anyway?

How Fast?

I don’t know all the details of the cannon shot, but I can get a few details from the news video. First, it seems they have located the three things that the cannon ball struck. Here is a shot from the newscast.

Cannon Balls: Size Matters

However, I am pretty sure they have the wrong starting location. This is what they show:

Mpas

The left red arrow is the location of the shot as implied by the news. The other red arrow is what looks like the bomb range where the Mythbusters have exploded stuff before. Take a closer look.

Drawings.key 1

The fence and the dirt from the cannon picture sure seem to look like the spot marked on the map. So, from Google Maps the distance from the cannon shot to the first house is about 800 meters.

Ok, a projectile shooting 800 meters. How fast would this have to be going? Here is the first trick. Let me make some assumptions. First that there is no air resistance (clearly, not true). Second, let me guess that the launch angle was about 20&Deg; above the horizontal. If the cannon ball starts and ends at the same vertical distance, I could write the two projectile motion equations:

La te xi t 1 7

I can solve the vertical equation for time and plug that in for time in the horizontal equation. This gives:

La te xi t 1 8

Instead of using 20&Deg;, let me plot the launch velocities for angles between 5&Deg; and 40&Deg;.

Launchang.png

I guess this shouldn’t really be called the “launch speed” since this is the speed after the cannon ball hit something. Oh well. It looks like the starting speed is between 100 m/s and 200 m/s (if I ignore air resistance). And that is the question: can I ignore air resistance? To do this, I first need to make some assumptions about the ball. Here are my guesses.

  • Let me use a ball diameter of about 11 cm. I get this by looking at the barrel size in the photo with Tory Belleci above.
  • The ball is made of iron with a density of 7860 kg/m3. This would make the mass of the cannon ball 5.5 kg.
  • The ball is a smooth sphere with a drag coefficient of 0.47.
  • One last assumption. Let me assume that the cannon ball was moving slow enough that the typical model for air resistance works.

One simple way to see if you need to include air resistance is to calculate the magnitude of the air resistance force for the speeds the ball will be moving. If the air resistance is small compared to the gravitational force, it might be ok to ignore it. Here is the usual model for the magnitude of the air resistance force.

La te xi t 1 9

The key thing here is the v2 term. If I use 200 m/s and the data above, I get an air resistance force of 107 N. The weight of the 5.5 kg ball would be just 53 Newtons. This means I can not ignore air resistance. Bummer.

Here is another plot. This is the same as above except I have added a similar plot of the starting velocities in the case where air resistance is included. (hint: the green line is no air resistance)

Angl 2.png

So, what was the “starting speed”? It seems likely to be in between 250 and 100 m/s (250 m/s is about 820 feet per second). Of course this assumes the ball hit the first house without bouncing. I wouldn’t be surprised if it did bounce.

Cannon Balls Vs. Bullets

This is one of my favorite things to point out: things don’t scale like you would expect. I don’t know why we expect this, but we do. You (I at least) always think something like:

Oh. A bullet has about the same density. Sure it will have a lower mass, but it will also have a smaller air resistance force. I guess a bullet and cannon ball shot with the same speed will go about the same distance.

This is wrong. Why? Let me draw a quick diagram.

Drawings.key 3

There are essentially two forces to consider. The gravitational force depends on the mass. For objects with the same density, the mass is proportional to the volume (which is proportional to the cube of the radius). The air resistance force depends on the cross sectional area of the object. In this case, that looks like a circle. The area of a circle is proportional to the radius squared.

So consider a bullet with a radius r. If I double the radius, the weight will be 8 times as much. The air resistance (for the same speed as the smaller bullet) will just go up by a factor of 4. Size matters. Yoda was wrong.

Just for comparison, let me re-run the starting speed calculation above except for a cannon ball that is half the size of the first one.

2balls.png

There you have it. Bigger balls win.

Stopping a Cannon Ball

Hoelinwall

This house didn’t stop a cannon ball. They aren’t very easy to stop. So, how thick of a thing (whatever that thing might be) would you need to stop a cannon ball?

It is best to think about this in terms of Work and Energy. If you want to stop the ball, you need to do enough work (negative work) to decrease the kinetic energy to zero (thus stopping it). In one dimension I can write the work-energy stuff as:

La te xi t 1 10

Work-Energy works so well since the work done on the ball depends on the distance. Perfect since we want to find the distance (or the force). So, let’s s say we want to start with a cannon ball going 300 m/s. A barrier is set up to slow it down to 50 m/s. If the barrier is 1 meter wide, what would the average force exerted on the ball need to be? See, I just wrote a homework question.

The work energy expression would be:

La te xi t 1 11

Using the values from above, this would be a force of 2.4 x 105 Newtons.

I guess you could do this the other way too. You could say “how thick would something need to be if it can exert this force.” Let me do one more thing. The MythBusters like to use trash cans of water stop things. Actually, they do this on highways too. Here is a shot from The Matrix Reloaded showing these water barriers.

Matrix

What if we just assume that this is just like normal water? What if the water slows the ball down just like in air, but with a greater density of material (?)? I know this isn’t actually what happens, but it is a good approximation.

Here is a plot of the speed of a cannon ball as a function of distance (in just one dimension) as it passes through water.

Water.png

In this model (which I repeat is almost certainly wrong – but still not a terrible approximation), 2 meters of water would knock the speed down to about 100 m/s. There is a huge difference between a cannon ball going 100 m/s vs. 300 m/s.

Authors:

French (Fr)English (United Kingdom)

Parmi nos clients

mobileporn