I've been trying to solve this sum, where you have to find tension as a function of angle $\theta$. The three masses are on a frictionless surface, and the middle one is given an initial velocity $u$. It's a pretty long problem, but there is one thing in my process I'm unsure about.
Let the masses be $m_1$, $m_2$ and $m_3$ from left to right. The force on $m_2$ will be $2T \cos \theta$. Looking at $m_1$ in the frame of reference of $m_2$, it will have some velocity $v$ perpendicular to the string. Along with the tensile force, there will also be a pseudo force $2T \cos \theta$ in the downward direction. Thus, taking the component of the pseudo force in the radial direction, and writing the equation for centripetal acceleration, I get:
$$\frac {mv^2}{l} = T - 2T \cos ^2 \theta$$
$$T = -\frac {mv^2}{l \cos 2\theta}$$
But according to this equation, once the angle reduces to $45^\circ$, the tension will approach infinity. Where did I go wrong?