What is Spring constant: Definition and 450 Discussions

Hooke's law is a law of physics that states that the force (F) needed to extend or compress a spring by some distance (x) scales linearly with respect to that distance—that is, Fs = kx, where k is a constant factor characteristic of the spring (i.e., its stiffness), and x is small compared to the total possible deformation of the spring. The law is named after 17th-century British physicist Robert Hooke. He first stated the law in 1676 as a Latin anagram. He published the solution of his anagram in 1678 as: ut tensio, sic vis ("as the extension, so the force" or "the extension is proportional to the force"). Hooke states in the 1678 work that he was aware of the law since 1660.
Hooke's equation holds (to some extent) in many other situations where an elastic body is deformed, such as wind blowing on a tall building, and a musician plucking a string of a guitar. An elastic body or material for which this equation can be assumed is said to be linear-elastic or Hookean.
Hooke's law is only a first-order linear approximation to the real response of springs and other elastic bodies to applied forces. It must eventually fail once the forces exceed some limit, since no material can be compressed beyond a certain minimum size, or stretched beyond a maximum size, without some permanent deformation or change of state. Many materials will noticeably deviate from Hooke's law well before those elastic limits are reached.
On the other hand, Hooke's law is an accurate approximation for most solid bodies, as long as the forces and deformations are small enough. For this reason, Hooke's law is extensively used in all branches of science and engineering, and is the foundation of many disciplines such as seismology, molecular mechanics and acoustics. It is also the fundamental principle behind the spring scale, the manometer, the galvanometer, and the balance wheel of the mechanical clock.
The modern theory of elasticity generalizes Hooke's law to say that the strain (deformation) of an elastic object or material is proportional to the stress applied to it. However, since general stresses and strains may have multiple independent components, the "proportionality factor" may no longer be just a single real number, but rather a linear map (a tensor) that can be represented by a matrix of real numbers.
In this general form, Hooke's law makes it possible to deduce the relation between strain and stress for complex objects in terms of intrinsic properties of the materials it is made of. For example, one can deduce that a homogeneous rod with uniform cross section will behave like a simple spring when stretched, with a stiffness k directly proportional to its cross-section area and inversely proportional to its length.

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  1. O

    Verifying the Relationship Between Force and Displacement in a Spring Experiment

    Suppose I hang a spring vertically from a table. I attach a mass on it. Am I correct in saying that the net force on the spring is 9.8*mass ? If I note the displacement, can I calculate the spring constant by using: K = -F/x = -g*mass / displacement ? Thanks,
  2. D

    Effective spring constant of two springs latched headon

    In the Princeton Review for AP Physics, there is a question on calculating the effective spring constant when two springs are joined side by side, like so: spring 1 spring 2 |~~~~~~ ~~~~~~[mass] Their spring constants are k1 and k2. How would you go about answering the question? The book...
  3. J

    I am glad I could help.Effective spring constant for two springs and a pulley

    Homework Statement What is the effective spring constant for the system of the two springs, perfect pulley, and string shown on the left for it to be modeled by just one spring (constant keff) as shown on the right? Homework Equations The Attempt at a Solution With k2 getting...
  4. B

    Spring Constant & Potential Energy

    Homework Statement Problem - Find the following: a. Potential energy in a fully compressed plastic spring. b. Spring constant This was a lab and we're supposed to do it at home, here are the variables I have measured: spring height when not compressed: 0.115 metres. spring height when...
  5. E

    Help finding the spring constant in a magnetic field

    Homework Statement Consider a wire loop in a 1.88 T magnetic field (coming out of the board at a 55.0° angle). The loop is 0.300 m tall and 0.400 m wide, carrying a 2.90 A current traveling in a clockwise direction. The loop feels a torque that causes the spring to compress. If the spring is...
  6. C

    Knowing Damping and Spring Constant Finding Time

    Homework Statement A spring with a force constant of 1.50 N/m is attached to a mass of 120 g. The system has a damping constant of 0.0180 Ns/m. How long does it take the amplitude of the oscillations to decrease from 10.0 mm to 5.00 mm? Homework Equations (double dot)x +(c/m)(one...
  7. M

    Spring constant of a piece of glass

    This is a real world application that I'm trying to figure out. I need to estimate the spring constant of a standard cover slip (used in microscopy). The coverslip is a thin glass square, dimensions 25mm x 25mm x0.15 mm. I know the Youngs modulus. How should I estimate the "spring constant" of...
  8. E

    Need help finding an equivalent spring constant

    Homework Statement I have a attached a photo of the problem I'm trying to solve. I defined x1 as displacement of the bar at the k1 spring, and did so similarly for x2 & k2. It is known k1=k2 as the bar lies flat in equilibrium before the force is applied.+ By taking the moment about F, I...
  9. C

    Solving Mass-Spring System: Find Spring Constant & Max Stretch

    Homework Statement A mass of 122 g is attached to a vertically hung spring. The mass stretches the spring 13.8 cm. (a) What is the spring constant of the spring? (b) If the mass is dropped from rest from a position where the spring is just relaxed, what will be the maximum distance the...
  10. N

    Does the spring constant of rubber affect the rate at which it cools?

    Does the spring constant of a piece of rubber affect its rate of cooling constant 'k' ? 1) Is there any formula, any proven relationship? 2) If there isn't, would investigating it make any sense? Or would it end up being a waste of time as the two variables are totally unrelated? Is there...
  11. Z

    Spring constant for a block sliding PE and KE

    1. An .8kg block is held in place against the spring by a 67 N horizontal external force. The external force is removed, and the block is projected with a v1=1.2. upon separation for the spring. The block then descends a ramp and has a velocity v2=1.9 m/s at the bottom. The track is frictionless...
  12. K

    About spring constant and Hooke's law

    Hi all, I am reading an online material on elastic force and Hooke's law on spring. The definition of the Hooke's law reads that the restoring force is linear proportional to the displacement of the spring with constant k. The restoring force is defined as the force bringing the object back...
  13. F

    Is There A Relationship Between Young's Modulus And Spring Constant?

    We know that the Young's modulus of an object is defined as the ratio between its stress and strain: Y = σ/ε , or: Y = F*L/A*ΔL We also know that Hooke's law, which can be applied to any linear elastic object, can find spring constant: F = k*x , rearranged: k = F/x But is...
  14. A

    Spring Constant Dilemma: Understanding Discrepancies in Solving for k

    Consider the following question: a woman of mass m steps onto a vertical spring and compresses it a distance d. What is the value of the spring constant k? The dilemma is that I found what I believe are two valid ways of solving this problem, but the two results for k are not equal! If...
  15. K

    Youngs Modulus & Spring Constant Experiment

    Homework Statement I've been asked to find the stiffness constant of a rubber band and young's modulus. To do this I created the experiment like this http://www.gcsesciencemethods.co.uk/2012/05/hookes-law-1.html and then i put all the values in a table. I plotted a graph of extension vs weight...
  16. R

    Atmospheric pressure and the spring constant

    Homework Statement I already found A, but I keep getting wrong answers for B. A cylinder is fitted with a piston, beneath which is a spring, as in the drawing. The cylinder is open to the air at the top. Friction is absent. The spring constant of the spring is 4300 N/m. The piston has a...
  17. A

    Ranking springs in terms of spring constant

    Homework Statement Homework Equations Hooke's law. F = kΔx ω = sqrt(k/m) The Attempt at a Solution For part A F = mg = kΔx k = mg/Δx g is a constant so the spring constant is proportional to the mass and inversely proportional to the change in distance that the spring...
  18. F

    Determining Spring Constant After Collision

    Homework Statement 1.2 kg cart slides down frictionless ramp from a height of 1.8m and then onto a horizontal surface where it has a head-on elastic collision with a stationary 2.0kg cart cushioned by an ideal Hooke's Law spring. Maximum compression of spring is 2.0 cm Determine the spring...
  19. S

    Find Spring constant given distance stretched by placing rock on spring

    Homework Statement A 8.00 kg stone lies at rest on a spring. The spring is compressed 10.0 cm (.1 m) by the stone. What is the spring constant? Homework Equations F = -kx E = (1/2)kx^2 U = mgh The Attempt at a Solution The solution provided uses a net force equation balancing Hooke's...
  20. 0

    Finding the Spring Constant of a mattress

    Homework Statement A mattress manufacturer estimates that 20 springs are required to comfortable support a 100kg person. When supporting the person, the 20 springs are compressed 0.035m. Calculate the spring constant for one sprint. Homework Equations The answer is 1400N/M at the back of...
  21. C

    Finding Spring Constant from a slope with a constant x?

    Homework Statement I quickly copied this down, so it is paraphrased but I hope it still makes sense. Some children are playing with a spring toy, compressing it off the ground and seeing how high it bounces. When they attach different masses to it, it bounces different heights. Each time...
  22. S

    Finding spring constant of hung mass

    Homework Statement Given a certain mass m is hung from a spring, Find spring constant. mg=kx or 1/2kx^2 = mgh? These two give very different results for k, but I can't tell which is right or wrong!
  23. F

    How Do You Calculate the Spring Constant for a Toy Car Accelerated by a Spring?

    A 2.8 kg toy car at rest on a horizontal surface is accelerated by a spring to 4.5 m/s in a distance of 5.3 cm. What is the spring constant of the spring? Hello, I was working on this problem in my homework but my professor hardly went over the spring constant in lecture. I was working on the...
  24. T

    Error propagation for effective spring constant

    Homework Statement Calculate the error propagation for the theoretical effective spring constant for the two springs. The actual values don't matter, it's just supposed to show how it would be calculated. Homework Equations ke=k1*k2/(k1+k2) The Attempt at a Solution ke=A*B/(A+B) (Let...
  25. B

    Compression spring constant k?

    Hi, Does a compression spring’s pitch or rise angle have any relation with its spring constant k? I checked various sources and they differ on this. Some sites simply asks you to feed input into a simple formula: k=Gd4/3D3na in which k: spring constant G: material’s shear modulus d...
  26. C

    Finding a spring constant of a car

    Homework Statement A car has a total mass of 2000kg, and a ground clearance of 40cm. But some fat dude got in and he made the ground clearance 30cm. What is the spring constant for this bad boy of a car? (The dude was so fat he made the shocks act like springs if you can believe it.) Also...
  27. I

    Spring Constant from Best Fit Line - sqrt(m) versus T

    Homework Statement Construct a plot of T versus \sqrt{m}. Fit a straight line through your data and use Eq. (3.2.3) to obtain the spring constant k from the slope, as well as an uncertainty estimate for k. T is the period of an inertial balance with various masses of mass m. Periods are...
  28. M

    Need to find the spring constant and dampening coefficient of a humarn arm.

    Hey. Working on a project at the moment, where i have to simulate a human arm (hand and lower arm). I need to find the spring constant, k, and dampening coefficient, c. You got any good ideas on how i can do that? So far i tried by measuring the mechanical impedance, and saying the arm is a...
  29. D

    Elastic Collision with a Spring Constant

    Homework Statement A pinball with mass 80g is struck by a lever with mass 80g in a pinball machine in an elastic collision. The lever was pulled back 2 cm by a spring with spring constant k=1.4N/cm. What is the speed of the ball just after collision? Homework Equations F=kx...
  30. M

    Gas Strut - Damping coeff and spring constant

    Hello everyone, I'm an engineering student and I have to "size" a gas strut (i.e. spring+damper) to model a trunk lid opening mechanism. I have a problem: on every "datasheet" (something like this http://www.strutsdirect.co.uk/components/variable-force-gas-struts.php) only forces and...
  31. T

    What is the force of the spring constant?

    If a spring is originally compressed by 6cm, what is the force of the spring constant? A block of inertia m=0.2kg is launched from a spring onto frictionless surface. The velocity is 2.5m/s upon leaving the spring. I used Hooke's law and got k=mg/x 0.2kg x 9.8m/s / 0.06m = 32.7 N/m The next...
  32. E

    Help With Calculating Spring Constant and Energy in System

    Homework Statement a spring stretches 8.0 cm when a 500. grams mass is hung from it. a. determine the spring constant.the mass is originally pulled 10.0 cm from equilibrium position. calculate the total energy in the system, and the EPE and KE if the distance is 4.0 cm from the equilibrium ...
  33. Y

    Question on spring constant w/potential energy

    Hi all. I'm having trouble understanding a homework problem. Here it is... Homework Statement The question, from my book, is: "When a mass m sits at rest on a spring, the spring is compressed by a distance d from its undeformed length. Suppose instead tht the mass is released from rest...
  34. S

    Calculate spring constant for cart attached to a spring

    Homework Statement A Cart is floating on an airtrack and is connected by a spring to one fixed object. The cart executes a simple harmonic motion with a period of 4 seconds. Its mass is 2kg. Its maximum displacement from rest position is 1.8m. Calculate the spring constant and provide units...
  35. H

    2 hanging masses with springs, find spring constant

    Homework Statement http://i.imgur.com/0gexJ.png Homework Equations F=kx (Hooke's Law), ƩFy=0 The Attempt at a Solution I drew a free-body diagram for each block. For block A, I get the equilibrium equation: Fa = (10kg)(9.81ms^-2) = 98.1N = kx_a x_a = 300mm-250mm = 50mm k = 1.962kN/m For block...
  36. T

    Determining spring constant of a tire

    Homework Statement We are modeling the behavior of a sack truck when driven over a small step. Afterwords we will do some tests with an actual sack truck to verify the model. The movement will be modeled simply like a spring-damping system only having one spring and one damper, thereby...
  37. R

    Theoretical spring constant calculation for a tube of pipe

    Homework Statement I require the a means to theoretically calculate the spring constant of a hollow tube. Essentially, I need to find the diameter of the glass pipette which will have a spring constant of 100 Newtons/metre. If someone could point me towards relevant information on...
  38. B

    Two identical springs with spring constant k and with two Identical masses m

    I am trying to figure out what the kinetic and potential energy of this system. A spring is attached to point A, a mass m hangs from the other end of the spring. Another spring hangs from the first mass, and another mass hangs from the second spring. There is no motion in the horizontal...
  39. A

    The value of spring constant in Mass spring system in an elevator

    A mass spring system is in elevator which moves upward with an acceleration "a" . What will be effect on the measured value of spring constant compared to its value when elevator is at rest. Since K= F/x At rest F=mg But with acceleration F=m(g+a) So I think the value is...
  40. A

    What Factors Affect the Value of Spring Constant?

    hello everyone! can you please explain on factors the value of spring constant depends? And please provide me with the required maths to get to that idea.. Thanks..
  41. D

    Need help finding spring constant from volume, area, temperature and distance

    An ideal gas is confined to a cylinder by a massless piston that is attached to an ideal spring. Outside the cylinder is a vacuum. The cross-sectional area of the piston is A = 2.50*10^-3 m^2. The initial pressure, volume, and temperature of the gas are, respectively, P0, V0 = 6.00*10^-4 m^3 and...
  42. S

    Why Does Spring Constant Decrease with Increased Load?

    Homework Statement Ive worked out all of my values for my shm assignment. In the table of results i have found that my spring constant decreases with load applied. Im stuggling to come with a good reason for this. Number Mass (kg) Spring displacement (m) Spring constant (N/m) 1 0.05 0 n/a 2...
  43. M

    Collision of Two Carts with Springs Attached

    Homework Statement Two carts collide. Cart A has a mass of 300 Kg and a velocity of 24 m/s. Cart B has a mass of 100 Kg and is stationary. Both carts have 20 m springs on them. Assume that the two carts exert no force on each other until the springs touch at a separation of d= 40 m, and...
  44. P

    Will a spring constant always remain the same?

    Homework Statement A Mass, M, is at rest on a frictionless surface, connected to an ideal horizontal spring that is unstretched. A person stretches the spring 30cm from equilibrium and holds it at this location by applying a 10N force. The spring is brought back to equilibrium and the mass...
  45. J

    Find spring constant, unknown projectile mass, vertical spring gun.

    What I have given is: A projectile with an unknown mass is launched 90 degrees vertically to a height of 0.650 m with a spring deformation of x = 0.031 m. The initial speed of the projectile is v0=3.6 m/sec and the projectile is resting on top of the spring gun "holder" before launch. Find the...
  46. R

    Finding spring constant by comparing to another spring

    Objects of equal mass are oscillating up and down in simple harmonic motion on two different vertical springs. The spring constant of spring 1 is 186 N/m. The motion of the object on spring 1 has 3 times the amplitude as the motion of the object on spring 2. The magnitude of the maximum velocity...
  47. G

    How Do You Calculate Spring Constants and Vibrations Using the GUESS Method?

    For these questions I use a problem solving method known as GUESS. G-given, U-unknown, E-equation, S-solve, S-solution A spring of spring constant of 25 N/m is attached to different masses, and the system is set in motion. Find the period and frequency of vibration for masses of the...
  48. idir93

    Can the spring constant k be negative ?

    Can the spring constant "k" be negative ? Hi, I found a difficulty when solving this problem from my textbook : In the arrangement of Figure 7-11 (which is basically a standard block attached to spring resting horizontally), we gradually pull the block from x = 0 to x = +3.0 cm, where it is...
  49. O

    Launching a Potato with a Spring: Solving for the Spring Constant

    Homework Statement A Certain potato "canon" consists of a 1.2 m tube with a thin platform inside. The Platform has a negligible mass and is attached to a spring. The spring is 20 cm long when relaxed, and the spring is compressed to a final length of 5 cm when ready to launch a potato. A potato...
  50. M

    What is the spring constant of spring?

    Homework Statement A 60 kg person drops from rest a distance of 1.20 m to a platform of negligible mass supported by a stiff spring. The platform drops 6 cm before the person comes to rest. What is the spring constant of spring? Homework Equations The Attempt at a Solution...
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