OpenQA11

#$&*

course PHY 121

3.26.11 at 12:52pm

011. Note that there are 12 questions in this set.

.Situations involving forces and accelerations.

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Question: `q001. A cart on a level, frictionless surface contains ten masses, each of mass

2 kg. The cart itself has a mass of 30 kg. A light weight hanger is attached to the cart

by a light but strong rope and suspended over the light frictionless pulley at the end of

the level surface.

Ignoring the weights of the rope, hanger and pulley, what will be the acceleration of the

cart if one of the 2 kg masses is transferred from the cart to the hanger?

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Your solution:

Cart = 30 kg, Masses = 20 kg Total system = 50 kg

2kg transferred to hanger leaves 48 kg in/on cart but still a total of 50 kg in system

9.8 Newtons of force exerted on each kg 9.8 *2 = 19.6 N

a = Fnet/m

=19.6 N/50kg

=0.392m/sec^2

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

At the surface of the Earth gravity, which is observed here near the surface to accelerate

freely falling objects at 9.8 m/s^2, must exert a force of 2 kg * 9.8 m/s^2 = 19.6 Newtons

on the hanging 2 kg mass.

This force will tend to accelerate the system consisting of the cart, rope, hanger and

suspended mass, in the 'forward' direction--the direction in which the various components of

the system must accelerate if the hanging mass is to accelerate in the downward direction.

This is the only force accelerating the system in this direction.

All other forces, including the force of gravity pulling the cart and the remaining masses

downward and the normal force exerted by the level surface to prevent gravity from

accelerating the cart downward, are in a direction perpendicular to the motion of these

components of the system; furthermore these forces are balanced so that they add up to 0.

The mass of the system is that of the 30 kg cart plus that of the ten 2 kg masses, a total

of 50 kg.

The net force of 19.6 Newtons exerted on a 50 kg mass therefore results in acceleration

a = Fnet / m = 19.6 Newtons / (50 kg)

= 19.6 kg m/s^2 / (50 kg)

= .392 m/s^2.

STUDENT QUESTION:

Our answers are close, but wouldn’t the 50kg actually by 48kg since the 2kg weight was

taken out of the kart?

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE:

The 2 kg weight is still part of the mass that's being accelerated. It's been moved from the

cart to the hanger, but it's still there. All 50 kg are being accelerated by that net force.

STUDENT QUESTION

Am I allowed to divide Newtons by Kg? Or do I have to change the Newtons to kg*m/s^2?

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE

You need to reduce everything to fundamental units. How would you know what N / kg is unless

they are both expressed in compatible units?

You could of course memorize the fact that N / kg gives you m/s^2, along with about 200

other shortcuts, but that would be a waste of time and wouldn't contribute much to your

insight or your ability to work out units in unfamiliar situations.

You can count the number of fundamental units in all of physics on one hand. If you know

the definitions of the quantities, this makes it very easy to deal with questions of units.

Unit calculations come down to the simple algebra of multiplying and dividing fractions,

whose numerators and denominators are just products and powers of a few simple units.

STUDENT QUESTION

Does it matter if you define aGravity as 9.8 m/s^2 or -9.8 m/s^2? Would -.39m/s^2 still be

correct since we just know it's perpendicular, and not which perpendicular direction is

positive?

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE:

In your solution you said

'Fnet = 2kg * -9.8m/s^2 = -19.6 N in the downward direction'

You weren't completely specific about what the - sign meant and what direction is positive.

If the upward direction is considered positive, then we would simply say that the

gravitational force is -19.6 N. We wouldn't add 'in the downward direction' because having

declared upward as positive, the negative sign already tells us that the force is downward.

If we were to say that the force is 19.6 N in the downward direction, this would be a true

statement, without the use of the -sign.

However this system doesn't move in just the up-down direction, and we have to be careful

how we define our positive direction:

The signs of the displacement, velocity and acceleration depend on the direction we choose

as positive.

We consider the system to consist of the cart and the hanging weights. Parts of this system

are moving in the vertical

direction and parts are moving in the horizontal direction, so neither vertical nor

horizontal can be regarded as the

positive direction.

Let's assume that we are oriented so that from our position the cart moves to the right as

the hanging weights descend. If

the cart moves to the right, the hanging weights move downward; if the cart moves to the

left the hanging weight move upward.

We can describe these motions as 'right-down' and 'left-up'.

We have to declare our choice of positive direction. We can choose either 'right-down' or

'left-up' to be positive,

whichever we find more convenient; having made this choice the opposite direction will be

regarded as negative.

Now gravity will pull the system in the 'right-down' direction. You might prefer to regard

the gravitational force as

negative, in which case you will choose 'left-up' as the positive direction. You have

implicitly done so by making your

acceleration negative.

So choosing 'left-up' as the positive direction the force exerted by gravity on the hanging

mass, which pulls the system in

the 'right-down' direction, will be negative. The resulting acceleration will in this case

be a = F_net / m = -19.6 N / (50

kg) = -.392 m/s^2. This means that acceleration will be opposite the direction of

motion--i.e., in the 'right-down'

direction.

It would have been equally valid to choose 'right-down' as the positive direction. The

gravitational force on the hanging

mass would be +19.6 N and the acceleration +.392 N.

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Self-critique (if necessary):

I just used Newtons instead of the kg * m/s^2. Will try to remember to use those units from

here forward.

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Self-critique rating:

@& Good. A summary of the units of force:

The Newton is the unit of force.

Force = mass * acceleration

mass is in kg, acceleration in m/s^2

So force is in units of kg * m/s^2.

That unit is called a Newton.

*@

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Question: `q002. Two 1-kg masses are suspended over a pulley, one on either side. A

100-gram mass is added to the 1-kg mass on one side of the pulley. How much force does

gravity exert on each side of the pulley, and what is the net force acting on the entire 2.1

kg system?

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Your solution:

1.1kg on one side

9.8m/s^2 * 1.1kg = 10.78 Netwons

1kg on the other side

9.8m/s^2 * 1kg = 9.8 Newtons

10.78 N + 9.8 N = 20.58 N

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

The 1-kg mass experiences a force of F = 1 kg * 9.8 m/s^2 = 9.8 Newtons. The other side has

a total mass of 1 kg + 100 grams = 1 kg + .1 kg = 1.1 kg, so it experiences a force of F =

1.1 kg * 9.8 Newtons = 10.78 Newtons.

Both of these forces are downward, so it might seem that the net force on the system would

be 9.8 Newtons + 10.78 Newtons = 20.58 Newtons. However this doesn't seem quite right,

because when one mass is pulled down the other is pulled up so in some sense the forces are

opposing. It also doesn't make sense because if we had a 2.1 kg system with a net force of

20.58 Newtons its acceleration would be 9.8 m/s^2, since we know very well that two nearly

equal masses suspended over a pulley won't both accelerate downward at the acceleration of

gravity.

So in this case we take note of the fact that the two forces are indeed opposing, with one

tending to pull the system in one direction and the other in the opposite direction.

We also see that we have to abandon the notion that the appropriate directions for motion of

the system are 'up' and 'down'. We instead take the positive direction to be the direction

in which the system moves when the 1.1 kg mass descends.

We now see that the net force in the positive direction is 10.78 Newtons and that a force of

9.8 Newtons acts in the negative direction, so that the net force on the system is 10.78

Newtons - 9.8 Newtons =.98 Newtons.

The net force of .98 Newtons on a system whose total mass is 2.1 kg results in an

acceleration of .98 Newtons / (2.1 kg) = .45 m/s^2, approx.. Thus the system accelerates in

the direction of the 1.1 kg mass at .45 m/s^2.

Additional note on + and - directions:

One force tends to accelerate the system in one direction, the other tends to accelerate it

in the opposite direction.

So you need to choose a positive direction and put a + or - sign on each force, consistent

with your chosen positive direction.

The positive direction can't be 'up' or 'down', since part of the system moves up while

another part moves down.

The easiest way to specify a positive direction is to specify the direction of one of the

masses.

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Self-critique (if necessary):

Trick question! I get the logic behind this though. It's almost like tug-of-war. The two

forces are pulling against one another, canceling each other out.

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Self-critique rating:

@& That's a good way to put it.

*@

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Question: `q003. If in the previous question there is friction in the pulley, as there

must be in any real-world pulley, the system in the previous problem will not accelerate at

the rate calculated there. Suppose that the pulley exerts a retarding frictional force on

the system which is equal in magnitude to 1% of the weight of the system. In this case what

will be the acceleration of the system, assuming that it is moving in the positive direction

(as defined in the previous exercise)?

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Your solution:

2.1kg * 0.01 = 0.021kg fFrict

a = Fnet/m

= (0.98N - 0.021N)/2.1kg

= 0.457 m/sec^2

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

We first determine the force exerted a friction. The weight of the system is the force

exerted by gravity on the mass of the system. The system has mass 2.1 kg, so the weight of

the system must be

2.1 kg * 9.8 m/s^2 = 20.58 Newtons.

1% of this weight is .21 Newtons, rounded off to two significant figures. This force will

be exerted in the direction opposite to that of the motion of the system; since the system

is assume to be moving in the positive direction the force exerted by friction will be

frictional force = -.21 Newtons.

The net force exerted by the system will in this case be 10.78 Newtons - 9.8 Newtons - .21

Newtons = .77 Newtons, in contrast with the .98 Newton net force of the original exercise.

The acceleration of the system will be

.77 Newtons / (2.1 kg) = .37 m/s^2, approx..

STUDENT SOLUTION

(this solution and the instructor's commentary address a common error in expression and in

thinking

this is worth a look

the main topic is why it's not appropriate to write an expression like

.98N-.21N=.77N/2.1kg=.37m/s^2

Using my numbers from the previous problem, we had .98N pulling down, so I will subtract an

additional .21

from that to get the Newtons pulling down w/ friction. .98N-.21N=.77N/2.1kg=.37m/s^2.

INSTRUCTOR COMMENTARY

It's clear what you mean by .98N-.21N=.77N/2.1kg=.37m/s^2, and everything you said up to

this point is very good and correct.

However as a mathematical statement .98N-.21N=.77N/2.1kg=.37m/s^2 is incorrect.

If .98N-.21N=.77N/2.1kg=.37m/s^2, then since quantities that are both equal to a third

quantity are equal to one another, .98N-.21N = .37m/s^2.

However N and m/s^2 are complete different units, so the left- and right-hand sides of this

equality are unlike terms. Unlike terms can't possibly be equal.

And of course it's very obvious that

.98N-.21N =. .37m/s^2

is simply an untrue statement.

Untrue statements tend to lead to confusion, e.g., when you review your work and don't

necessarily remember what you were thinking when you wrote the thing down, or when your

statement is viewed by someone else who doesn't already know what to expect.

If you said

F_net = .98N-.21N=.77N

so

a = F_net / m = .77 N / (2.1kg) =.37m/s^2

then you would not have any false statements in your solution, your solution would be clear

to anyone who understands Newton's Second Law, and would be much more likely useful to you

when reviewing your work.

(Note also that N / kg = (kg m/s^2) / kg = m/s^2

It's important to maintain the habit of reducing units to fundamental units and doing the

algebra of the units.)

STUDENT QUESTION

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Self-critique (if necessary):

I took 1% of the 2.1 kg, not 1% of the 20.58 N. How would you know which figure to use? I

was under the impression that the 1% was coming from the weight of the system, not from the

force exerted on it?

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Self-critique rating:

@& The system consists of both masses, a total mass of 2.1 kg.

So the weight of the system is 2.1 kg * 9.8 m/s^2, and 1% of this weight is .21 N.

The mass of the system is 2.1 kg.

THe weight of the system is 21 N.

The net force on the system is .98 N.

*@

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Question: `q004. Why was it necessary in the previous version of the exercise to specify

that the system was moving in the direction of the 1.1 kg mass. Doesn't the system have to

move in that direction?

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Your solution:

Not necessarily. It can fluctuate around until it reaches an equilibrium position. If

you're holding each mass and drop them, it will bounce around briefly until the heavier mass

slows the lighter mass.

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

If the system is released from rest, since acceleration is in the direction of the 1.1 kg

mass its velocity will certainly always be positive.

However, the system doesn't have to be released from rest. We could give a push in the

negative direction before releasing it, in which case it would continue moving in the

negative direction until the positive acceleration brought it to rest for an instant, after

which it would begin moving faster and faster in the positive direction.

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Self-critique (if necessary):

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Self-critique rating:

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Question: `q005. If the system of the preceding series of exercises is initially moving in

the negative direction, then including friction in the calculation what is its acceleration?

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Your solution:

Negative direction 9.8 N

Positive direction 10.78 N

FFrict 0.21 N

a = (9.8-10.78-0.21)/2.1kg

= -0.567m/sec^2

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

Its acceleration will be due to the net force. This net force will include the 10.78 Newton

force in the positive direction and the 9.8 Newton force in the negative direction. It will

also include a frictional force of .21 Newtons in the direction opposed to motion.

Since motion is in the negative direction, the frictional force will therefore be in the

positive direction. The net force will thus be

Fnet = 10.78 Newtons - 9.8 Newtons + .21 Newtons = +1.19 Newtons,

in contrast to the +.98 Newtons obtained when friction was neglected and the +.77 Newtons

obtained when the system was moving in the positive direction. ,

The acceleration of the system is therefore

a = 1.19 N / (2.1 kg) = .57 m/s^2.

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Self-critique (if necessary):

I got negative acceleration in my calculations. Still not 100% why/how it would be positive

acceleration if we are going in the negative direction which is almost working against

gravity, it seems to me.

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Self-critique rating:

@& The positive direction was previously specified to be the direction in which the greater mass descended.

So the 10.78 N force on the greater mass is positive, the 9.8 N force on the lesser mass is negative.

The system is initially moving in the negative direction (this means that the greater mass is ascending, the lesser mass descending, as could for example have happened if you had giventhe greater mass an upward push)

The frictional force is in the direction opposite the motion of the system, and is hence positive (as long as the system is moving in the negative direction).

Motion in the negative direction is indeed against the effect of gravity. If no other forces are exerted on the system, it will as a result come to rest after a time, and will then begin moving in the positive direction.

At all times the system would be accelerating in the positive direction. First as the system moves in the negative direction, the positive acceleration will slow it. After coming to rest the positive acceleration will then begin speeding the system up.*@

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Question: `q006. If friction is neglected, what will be the result of adding 100 grams to

a similar system which originally consists of two 10-kg masses, rather than the two 1-kg

masses in the previous examples?

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Your solution:

10.1kg * 9.8m/s^2 = 98.98 Newtons

10 kg *9.8m/s^2 = 98 Newtons

a = Fnet/m

= (98.98 - 98)/20.1kg

= 0.049m/s^2

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

In this case the masses will be 10.1 kg and 10 kg. The force on the 10.1 kg mass will be

10.1 kg * 9.8 m/s^2 = 98.98 Newtons and the force on the 10 kg mass will be 10 kg * 9.8

m/s^2 = 98 Newtons.

The net force will therefore be .98 Newtons, as it was in the previous example where

friction was neglected.

We note that this.98 Newtons is the result of the additional 100 gram mass, which is the

same in both examples.

The total mass of the system is 10 kg + 10.1 kg = 20.1 kg, so that the acceleration of the

system is

a = .98 Newtons / 20.1 kg = .048 m/s^2, approx..

Comparing this with the preceding situation, where the net force was the same (.98 N) but

the total mass was 2.1 kg, we see that the same net force acting on the significantly

greater mass results in significantly less acceleration.

Note on the direction of the frictional force: It's not quite accurate to say that the

frictional force is always in the direction opposite motion. I'm not really telling you the

whole story here--trying to keep things simple. Friction can indeed speed things up,

depending on your frame of reference.

The more accurate statement is that forces exerted by kinetic friction act in the direction

opposite the relative motion of the two surfaces. (Forces exerted by static friction act in

the direction opposite the sum of all other forces).

For example a concrete block, free to slide around in the bed of a pickup truck which is

accelerating forward, is accelerated by the frictional force between it and the truckbed. So

the frictional force is in its direction of motion. If the block doesn't slide, it is static

friction that accelerates it and there is no relative motion between the surfaces of the

block and the truckbed. If the block does slide, the frictional force is still pushing it

forward relative to the road, and relative to the road it accelerates in its direction of

motion, but the frictional force isn't sufficient to accelerate it at the same rate as the

truck; it therefore slides backward relative to the truckbed. Relative to the truckbed the

block slides backward while the frictional force pushes it forward--the frictional force is

in the direction opposite the relative motion.

If the block is sliding, it is moving toward the back of the truck while friction is pushing

it toward the front. So in this case the frictional force acts in the direction opposite the

relative motion of the two surfaces.

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Self-critique (if necessary):

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Self-critique rating:

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Question: `q007. If friction is not neglected, what will be the result for the system with

the two 10-kg masses with .1 kg added to one side? Note that by following what has gone

before you could, with no error and through no fault of your own, possibly get an absurd

result here, which will be repeated in the explanation then resolved at the end of the

explanation.

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Your solution:

98.98 N + 98 N = 196.98 N 1% =1.9698 N

a = (98.98 - 98 - 1.9698)/20.1kg

a = -0.049 m/s^2

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

If friction is still equal to 1% of the total weight of the system, which in this case is

20.1 kg * 9.8 m/s^2 = 197 Newtons, then the frictional force will be .01 * 197 Newtons =

1.97 Newtons. This frictional force will oppose the motion of the system.

For the moment assume the motion of the system to be in the positive direction. This will

result in a frictional force of -1.97 Newtons. The net force on the system is therefore

98.98 Newtons - 98 Newtons - 1.97 Newtons = -.99 Newtons.

This net force is in the negative direction, opposite to the direction of the net

gravitational force. If the system is moving this is perfectly all right--the frictional

force being greater in magnitude than the net gravitational force, the system can slow down.

Suppose the system is released from rest. Then we might expect that as a result of the

greater weight on the positive side it will begin accelerating in the positive direction.

However, if it moves at all the frictional force would result in a -.99 Newton net force,

which would accelerate it in the negative direction and very quickly cause motion in that

direction. Of course friction can't do this--its force is always exerted in a direction

opposite to that of motion--so friction merely exerts just enough force to keep the object

from moving at all.

Friction acts as though it is quite willing to exert any force up to 1.97 Newtons to oppose

motion, and up to this limit the frictional force can be used to keep motion from beginning.

In fact, the force that friction can exert to keep motion from beginning is usually greater

than the force it exerts to oppose motion once it is started.

STUDENT QUESTION

I understand how we got the 197 newtons, but I do not understand why we need to find the 1

percent, Is

friction always 1 percent of of the total weight of the object, or were we just to assume

from the previous problem?????? I understand why it is negative and how we get 1.97 newtons

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE

Friction is a percent of the force 'pressing' two objects together; the percent depends on

the nature of the two surfaces (e.g., ice sliding over smooth plastic will be a small

percent, while rubber sliding over asphalt is much higher).

That percent is usually called the 'coefficient of friction', and is generally expressed in

decimal form (e.g., a 1% coefficient of friction would be .01).

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Self-critique (if necessary):

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Self-critique rating:

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Question: `q008. A cart on an incline is subject to the force of gravity. Depending on

the incline, some of the force of gravity is balanced by the incline. On a horizontal

surface, the force of gravity is completely balanced by the upward force exerted by the

incline. If the incline has a nonzero slope, the gravitational force (i.e., the weight of

the object) can be thought of as having two components, one parallel to the incline and one

perpendicular to the incline. The incline exerts a force perpendicular to itself, and

thereby balances the weight component perpendicular to the incline. The weight component

parallel to the incline is not balanced, and tends to accelerate the object down the

incline. Frictional forces tend to resist this parallel component of the weight and reduce

or eliminate the acceleration.

A complete analysis of these forces is best done using the techniques of vectors, which will

be encountered later in the course. For now you can safely assume that for small slopes

(less than .1) the component of the gravitational force parallel to the incline is very

close to the product of the slope and the weight of the object. [If you remember your

trigonometry you might note that the exact value of the parallel weight component is the

product of the weight and the sine of the angle of the incline, that for small angles the

sine of the angle is equal to the tangent of the angle, and that the tangent of the angle of

the incline is the slope. The product of slope and weight is therefore a good approximation

for small angles or small slopes.]

What therefore would be the component of the gravitational force acting parallel to an

incline with slope .07 on a cart of mass 3 kg?

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Your solution:

I'm not understanding the question. I get that on a horizontal surface the two forces will counter and balance one another. What confuses me is the perpendicular force. Are you saying that since the object is on an incline that the gravitational force is parallel to the inlcine? The perpendicular force is balance since there is nothing to actually 'pull' it back to EArth?

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

The gravitational force on a 3 kg object is its weight and is equal to 3 kg * 9.8 m/s^2 =

29.4 Newtons. The weight component parallel to the incline is found approximately as

(parallel weight component) = slope * weight = .07 * 29.4 Newtons = 2.1 Newtons (approx.)..

STUDENT COMMENT: It's hard to think of using the acceleration of 9.8 m/s^2 in a situation

where the object is not free falling. Is weight known as a force measured in Newtons? Once

again I'm not used to using mass and weight differently. If I set a 3 kg object on a scale,

it looks to me like the weight is 3 kg.INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE: kg is commonly used as if it is

a unit of force, but it's not. Mass indicates resistance to acceleration, as in F = m a.

{}{}eight is the force exerted by gravity. {}{}The weight of a given object changes as you

move away from Earth and as you move into the proximity of other planets, stars, galaxies,

etc.. As long as the object remains intact its mass remains the same, meaning it will

require the same net force to give it a specified acceleration wherever it is.{}{}An object

in free fall is subjected to the force of gravity and accelerates at 9.8 m/s^2. This tells

us how much force gravity exerts on a given mass: F = mass * accel = mass * 9.8 m/s^2. This

is the weight of the object. **

STUDENT NOTE:

i didn't think to use the acceleration of gravity for this one, it said the object was

paralell

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE:

The situation talks about the weight having two components, one being parallel to the

incline, and the instruction tells you how to find that parallel component when the slope of

the incline is small.

We know from experience that an object will pick up speed along the incline, as opposed to

the direction perpendicular to the incline (to move in the perpendicular direction the

object would have to leave the incline, either burrowing down into the incline or levitating

up off the incline).

The direction along the incline is parallel to the incline. So its acceleration is parallel

to the incline, and the net force must be parallel to the incline.

In the absence of other forces, only gravity has a component parallel to the incline.

Therefore in this ideal case the gravitational component parallel to the incline is the net

force. In reality there are other forces present (e.g., friction) but the parallel

gravitational component is nevertheless present, and contributes to the net force in the

direction of motion.

STUDENT QUESTION

If we are finding the force at 29.4 newtons is that the perpendicular, and the slope *

weight is parallel, why is

this considered the weight instead of force in the calculation, is this because the weight

is the force that is moving the

object

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE

The weight of an object is the force exerted on it by gravity.

Since objects near the surface of the Earth accelerates downward, if free to do so, at 9.8

m/s^2, the weight of an object is 9.8 m/s^2 multiplied by its mass.

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Self-critique (if necessary):

All your reasoning makes sense. I just have a hard time picturing a gravitational force in the perpendicular direction.

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Self-critique rating:

@& If you're coasting along a level road, gravity pulls you downward, perpendicular to the road. The road holds you up against the gravitational force. No matter how far you move along the level road, your elevation will not increase and will not decrease. So your motion has no component in the direction of gravity.

If you're coasting down a hill, gravity still pulls you straight downward. However it is no longer perpendicular to your motion, which is partly in the downward direction. If you displace, say, 100 meters along the incline, your elevation might decrease by a few meters. So your displacement would have a nonzero component in the direction of gravity.

Now as you coast down the hill, the gravitational pull is not perpendicular to your motion. If you were on a level it would be, but not when going down a hill. There is now a nonzero component of the gravitational force which is in the direction of your motion. The steeper the hill, the greater will be that component of the gravitational force, and the greater will be your resulting acceleration.*@

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Question: `q009. What will be the acceleration of the cart in the previous example,

assuming that it is free to accelerate down the incline and that frictional forces are

negligible?

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Your solution:

a = Fnet/m

=(3kg * 9.8m/sec^2)/3kg

= 9.8m/sec^2

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

The weight component perpendicular to the incline is balanced by the perpendicular force

exerted by the incline. The only remaining force is the parallel component of the weight,

which is therefore the net force. The acceleration will therefore be a = F / m = 2.1

Newtons / (3 kg) = .7 m/s^2.

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Self-critique (if necessary):

Why do we use 2.1 Newtons? Fnet wouldn't be 3g * 9.8m/sec^2?

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Self-critique rating:

@& The slope is 0.07, so the component of the gravitational force in the direction of motion (the component that accelerates you) is 2.1 N, as seen in the preceding example.

If you were falling straight down, then the entire force of gravity would be accelerating you. On a 7% incline, only a component of about .07 times the gravitational force is 'going your way'.*@

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Question: `q010. What would be the acceleration of the cart in the previous example if

friction exerted a force equal to 2% of the weight of the cart, assuming that the cart is

moving down the incline? [Note that friction is in fact a percent of the perpendicular

force exerted by the incline; however for small slopes the perpendicular force is very close

to the total weight of the object].

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

Weight = m * 9.8m/sec^2

=3kg * 9.8m/sec^2

= 29.4 N

29.4 N * 0.02 = 0.588 N

a = (2.1 N - 0.588 N) / 3kg

= 0.504 m/sec^2

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

The weight of the cart was found to be 29.4 Newtons. The frictional force will therefore be

.02 * 29.4 Newtons = .59 Newtons approx.. This frictional force will oppose the motion of

the cart, which is down the incline.

If the downward direction along the incline is taken as positive, the frictional force will

be negative and the 2.1 Newton parallel component of the weight will be positive. The net

force on the object will therefore be

net force = 2.1 Newtons - .59 Newtons = 1.5 Newtons (approx.).

This will result in an acceleration of

a = Fnet / m = 1.5 Newtons / 3 kg = .5 m/s^2.

STUDENT QUESTION (instructor comments in bold)

ok, so the weight is equal to the force that is making the onject go down the incline

(because force and mass are equal

here????)

the force is equal to the mass times the acceleration of gravity

the mass is 3 kg, the weight is 29.4 Newtons

the mass or weight was 29.4newtons. 2 percent of this is .02 * 29.4 = .59 newtons which is

the frictional force, and that should

be -.59 since friction works in the opposite direction of the system. To find the net force

of the system with add -.59 + 2.1Newtons

= 1.5 newtons

So the mass of the systme = 3kg

a= f/m = 1.5/3kg = .5m/s^2

I am a little confused, I am not sure about the weight (being the gravity 9.8m/s^2 * the

mass 3kg= 29.4newtons) is related to

the force of the system slope .07 * weight 29.4?????

That goes back to the statement in the preceding problem, about how the gravitational force

splits into two components, one being parallel to the incline and equal to slope * weight

(provided slope is small).

We will see soon, in terms of vectors, why this is so, and also how to deal with the

situation where the slope isn't small.

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Self-critique (if necessary):

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Self-critique rating:

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Question: `q011. Given the conditions of the previous question, what would be the

acceleration of the cart if it was moving up the incline?

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Your solution:

fFrict = 0.588 N

f = 2.1 N

m = 3kg

a = Fnet/m

= (-2.1 + 0.588)/3kg -2.1 since we are moving in neg direction.

= -0.504m/sec^2

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

In this case the frictional force would still have magnitude .59 Newtons, but would be

directed opposite to the motion, or down the incline. If the direction down the incline is

still taken as positive, the net force must be

net force = 2.1 Newtons + .59 Newtons = 2.7 Newtons (approx).

The cart would then have acceleration

a = Fnet / m = 2.7 Newtons / 3 kg = .9 m/s^2.

STUDENT QUESTION

?????????????????????????????????if the cart is moving downhill and this is considered in

the positive direction parallel to

the weight of the object which is also considered to be positve, why if it is going in the

opposite direction would that not

be considered negative since the systme is moving against gravity and the force of it own

weight ( which made it go down the

incline in the previous problem) ??????????????????????????

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE

The direction of gravity does not determine the positive direction; the positive direction

is simply declared in the solution, and you would be free to use either direction as

positive.

Once the positive direction is declared, all forces, displacements, velocities and

accelerations will be positive or negative depending on whether they are in the positive

direction, or opposite to it.

The positive direction as chosen in the given solution is down the incline. The displacement

is up the incline, as is the velocity, so both displacement and velocity are negative.

The frictional force and the component of the gravitational force along the incline are both

positive, according to the choice of positive direction.

So the object has a negative velocity and a positive acceleration, meaning that it is moving

in the negative direction but slowing.

It takes some thinking to get used to this idea; the idea is far from trivial.

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Self-critique (if necessary):

I used the right figures, just didn't use them correctly. Like the student above, I had trouble determining which direction was positive, negative. I'm thinking that fFrict would be working against movement up the inlcine. Is that incorrect?

@& fFrict is indeed in the direction opposite the movement of the object.

If you assumed the upward direction to be positive, as it appears you did, then the frictional force would be negative, as is the 2.1 N component of the gravitational force. So your .588 N should have been negative.

The given solution assumed that down the incline was positive, so that the 2.1 N force and the .588 N force were positive.

You can choose either direction as positive. Then just be consistent with your choice while assigning + or - signs to your forces.

*@

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Self-critique rating:

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Question: `q012. Assuming a very long incline, describe the motion of the cart which is

given an initial velocity up the incline from a point a few meters up from the lower end of

the incline. Be sure to include any acceleration experienced by the cart.

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

The cart will initially accelerate upwards with a decreasing velocity, thus a diminishing acceleration. It will then start to accelerate faster until it reaches the tip of the incline.

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

The cart begins with a velocity up the incline, which we still taken to be the negative

direction, and an acceleration of +.9 m/s^2. This positive acceleration tends to slow the

cart while it is moving in the negative direction, and the cart slows by .9 m/s every second

it spends moving up the incline.

Eventually its velocity will be 0 for an instant, immediately after which it begins moving

down the incline as result of the acceleration provided by the weight component parallel to

the incline.

As soon as it starts moving down the incline its acceleration decreases to +.5 m/s^2, but

since the acceleration and velocity are now parallel the cart speeds up, increasing its

velocity by .5 m/s every second, until it reaches the lower end of the incline.

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Self-critique (if necessary):

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Self-critique rating:

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Additional Questions with some common student answers and instructor's responses in

boldface.

What is the definition of rate of change? the change in rate a divided by the change in rate

b What is the definition of average velocity? vAve = change in distance divided by time

average velocity is average rate of change of position with respect to clock time, which is

change in position / change in clock time (not change in distance / time).

What is the definition of average acceleration? aAve = change in velocity divided by time

The definition is average rate of change of velocity with respect to clock time, which is

change in velocity / change in clock time, not change in velocity / time.

What are the four equations of uniformly accelerated motion. vf = v0 +a`dt, vf =

sqroot(v0^2`dt+2a`dt), `ds = v0`dt +2a`dt^2, `ds = (vf-v0)/2 *`dt

Good, but see below. In the order I refer to them the equations are:

`ds = (vf-v0)/2 *`dt

vf = v0 +a`dt,

`ds = v0`dt +2a`dt^2,

vf^2 = v0^2`dt+2a`dt

The fourth equation has two solutions for vf, and only one of them is vf =

sqrt(v0^2`dt+2a`dt). The other is vf = - sqrt(v0^2`dt+2a`dt) .

What is the definition of work? work is force though a displacement

work is the product of force and displacement

there's a little more to the definition when force and displacement don't act along the same

line, but we'll leave that until a little later when it's introduced in the course

What is the definition of kinetic energy? change in work multiplied by distance

kinetic energy is 1/2 m v^2

What is the definition of potential energy? change in work in the negative direction

change in potential energy is work done against a conservative force, equal and opposite to

work done by the conservative force

What does the work-kinetic energy theorem say? work plus kinetic energy equal zero

The work done by the net force acting on a system is equal to the change in the KE of the

system. `dW_net = `dKE.

If a force in the positive direction is applied through a displacement in the negative

direction, does it do positive or negative work? negative If a force in the negative

direction is applied through a displacement in the negative direction, does it do positive

or negative work? positive How do the directions of a force and a displacement determine

whether that force does positive or negative work on the corresponding interval?

You didn't answer this one, but I think you understand that the sign of the work done by a

force is positive if force and displacement have like signs, and negative if their signs are

unlike

For each of the following questions, choose a positive direction, then determine whether the

force doing the work acts in the positive or negative direction, and whether the

displacement through which the force acts is positive or negative. Use these considerations

to answer the questions: Does gravity do positive or negative work on a rising object?

negative

force is downward, displacement is upward, so the signs are opposite and the work done by

the force is negative

Does the force exerted by a spring do positive or negative work as the spring is compressed?

positive

The spring exerts a force in the direction opposite the direction of compression, so the

work done in this case is negative.

Do the tires of your car do positive or negative work on the pavement when you are braking?

negative

The tires are moving forward and they are pushing forward of the pavement (think about the

fact that on a gravel road, a quickly braking car moves the gravel forward, so the work is

positive.

Does the pavement do positive or negative work on your tires when you are speeding up?

negative

The tires are pushing backwards (think of spinning tires on a gravel road--the gravel is

moved backward). The pavement is therefore pushing forward, in the direction of motion, so

the work is positive.

When you stretch a rubber band, does it do positive or negative work on your fingers?

negative

Your fingers pull in one direction, the rubber band exerts its force in the opposite

direction, so the work is indeed negative.

"

Self-critique (if necessary):

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Self-critique rating:

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Additional Questions with some common student answers and instructor's responses in

boldface.

What is the definition of rate of change? the change in rate a divided by the change in rate

b What is the definition of average velocity? vAve = change in distance divided by time

average velocity is average rate of change of position with respect to clock time, which is

change in position / change in clock time (not change in distance / time).

What is the definition of average acceleration? aAve = change in velocity divided by time

The definition is average rate of change of velocity with respect to clock time, which is

change in velocity / change in clock time, not change in velocity / time.

What are the four equations of uniformly accelerated motion. vf = v0 +a`dt, vf =

sqroot(v0^2`dt+2a`dt), `ds = v0`dt +2a`dt^2, `ds = (vf-v0)/2 *`dt

Good, but see below. In the order I refer to them the equations are:

`ds = (vf-v0)/2 *`dt

vf = v0 +a`dt,

`ds = v0`dt +2a`dt^2,

vf^2 = v0^2`dt+2a`dt

The fourth equation has two solutions for vf, and only one of them is vf =

sqrt(v0^2`dt+2a`dt). The other is vf = - sqrt(v0^2`dt+2a`dt) .

What is the definition of work? work is force though a displacement

work is the product of force and displacement

there's a little more to the definition when force and displacement don't act along the same

line, but we'll leave that until a little later when it's introduced in the course

What is the definition of kinetic energy? change in work multiplied by distance

kinetic energy is 1/2 m v^2

What is the definition of potential energy? change in work in the negative direction

change in potential energy is work done against a conservative force, equal and opposite to

work done by the conservative force

What does the work-kinetic energy theorem say? work plus kinetic energy equal zero

The work done by the net force acting on a system is equal to the change in the KE of the

system. `dW_net = `dKE.

If a force in the positive direction is applied through a displacement in the negative

direction, does it do positive or negative work? negative If a force in the negative

direction is applied through a displacement in the negative direction, does it do positive

or negative work? positive How do the directions of a force and a displacement determine

whether that force does positive or negative work on the corresponding interval?

You didn't answer this one, but I think you understand that the sign of the work done by a

force is positive if force and displacement have like signs, and negative if their signs are

unlike

For each of the following questions, choose a positive direction, then determine whether the

force doing the work acts in the positive or negative direction, and whether the

displacement through which the force acts is positive or negative. Use these considerations

to answer the questions: Does gravity do positive or negative work on a rising object?

negative

force is downward, displacement is upward, so the signs are opposite and the work done by

the force is negative

Does the force exerted by a spring do positive or negative work as the spring is compressed?

positive

The spring exerts a force in the direction opposite the direction of compression, so the

work done in this case is negative.

Do the tires of your car do positive or negative work on the pavement when you are braking?

negative

The tires are moving forward and they are pushing forward of the pavement (think about the

fact that on a gravel road, a quickly braking car moves the gravel forward, so the work is

positive.

Does the pavement do positive or negative work on your tires when you are speeding up?

negative

The tires are pushing backwards (think of spinning tires on a gravel road--the gravel is

moved backward). The pavement is therefore pushing forward, in the direction of motion, so

the work is positive.

When you stretch a rubber band, does it do positive or negative work on your fingers?

negative

Your fingers pull in one direction, the rubber band exerts its force in the opposite

direction, so the work is indeed negative.

"

Self-critique (if necessary):

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Self-critique rating:

#*&!

&#Your work looks good. See my notes. Let me know if you have any questions. &#