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Leaf Blowing (Pt. 2 - C.O.G.)


ZZ

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In my last post I discussed the physics of leaf blowing, in the theme of the fall season we are experiencing currently. This weekend, while I continued the struggle of doing leaves at our foliage ridden house, I had to blow off the roof and clean the gutters using the leaf blower.

While I'm not afraid of heights like some people are, I do realize the danger of being 20-30ft above the ground on a surface sloped toward my certain demise. In addition to the force I feel down the slope, which we know is mgsinø, I also had to account for the force of the leaf blower which I was using to blow the leaves up and over the roof. While I knew this would not be the safest method to blow leaves off, since I would have the force of the leaf blower and the force due to gravity pushing me toward the end of the roof, I did it anyways so that the leaves would end up in the forest behind the house. However, out of instinct, I made sure to crouch down low to achieve was most refer to as - a lower center of gravity.

Center of gravity can be defined as the point at which we can consider the weight of an object to be concentrated. The lower one's center of gravity is, the higher its stability is. To increase my stability, I increased the area of the base supporting me by going down on all four. In addition to increasing the area of my base of support, lowering my center of gravity by crouching makes falling over more difficult. I managed to stay in what they call "stable equilibrium." An object in "stable equilibrium" will tilt and return to its original position, whereas an object in "unstable equilibrium" will tilt and then fall over.  

An example pertaining to center of gravity that most people can relate to is tipping over a coffee mug vs a tall dinner glass. Assuming the two have roughly the same mass and base area, why is it harder to tip over the coffee mug? It's because the coffee mug has a lower center of gravity. If you were to tip both cups, the tall dinner glass's center of gravity would cross its base before the coffee mug would, hence why it has a higher center of gravity and is easier to tip over. This is why when we want to become more stable, we lower our center of gravity to avoid tumbling over.

Luckily I finished the job well, and lived to tell the tale!

science-gravity-center_of_gravity-holes-

 

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