Yume wrote:Snow wrote:Here's another follow up teaser:
Now suppose the planes engines were off and that it was loaded with cargo in the front of the plane. The planes captain takes all the cargo and moves it to the very back of the plane. An observer standing next to the treadmill watchs. Does the observer see the plane move?
The way I see it is the cargo has to achieve some sort of velocity to get from the front to the back. If the cargo were pushed (frictionless) from the front of the plane at a certain velocity and then had a nonelastic collision with the back wall of the plane, the plane would have a force pushing it forward meaning that if it were on a runway it would move forward then stop (net kinetic energy gain = 0, net potential energy gain = 0).
But instead of sitting on a runway it's sitting on a treadmill that moves in the opposite direction of the plane. However we've previously determined that any motion of the treadmill has zero force on the plane because the plane still uses ball bearing wheels. So the only forces on the plane are pushing it forward as the cargo heads to the back and then pushing it back as the cargo hits the back of the plane meaning that the plane is displaced relative to the observer, starting still and ending still.
That's sort of right but wasnt quite the answer I was looking for. You dont need a big nonelastic collision with the back wall of the plane. In fact you could pick up the cargo, load it on a pushcart that has frictionless wheels / bearings etc, push the cart across the plane, lift the cargo off and gently place it back on the ground without touching the back wall of the craft or another box. Regardless of how you get it there (assuming no engery is produced like heat, etc), the best way in my opinion to think of it is the following: there are no external forces working on the plane + everything inside it. Hence the center of mass of the plane system does not move. By moving the cargo inside the plane, the rest of the plane must move to adjust such that the center of mass of the plane + everything inside it is unchanged. Hence, yes the plane appears to move relative to the outside observer.