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A5.00 kgstone is rubbed across the horizontal ceiling of a cave passageway (Fig. 6-48). If the coefficient of kinetic friction is0.65and the force applied to the stone is angled atθ=70.0°, what must the magnitude of the force be for the stone to move at constant velocity?

Short Answer

Expert verified

F=118 N

Step by step solution

01

Given data

  • Mass of stone,m=5.00 k²µ.
  • Coefficient of friction,μk=0.65.
  • The angle of force,θ=70.0o
02

To understand the concept

The problem deals with Newton’s second law of motion, which states that the acceleration of an object is dependent upon the net force acting upon the object and the mass of the object.

Draw the free body diagram of the stone. Then, applying Newton’s second law, the given problem can be solved.

03

Draw the free body diagram and write force equations

The free-body diagram for the stone is shown below, with F→being the force applied to the stone, F→Nthe normal downward force of the ceiling on the stone, mg→the force of gravity, and f→the force of friction. We take the +xdirection to be horizontal to the right and the +ydirection to be up.

The equations for thexand theycomponents of the force according to Newton's second law are:

role="math" localid="1661240446674" Fx=¹ó³¦´Ç²õθ−f=ma

Fy=¹ó²õ¾±²Ôθ−FN−mg=0

04

Calculate the magnitude of the force for the stone to move at constant velocity 

Friction can be written as,

f=μkFN

f=μk(¹ó²õ¾±²Ôθ−mg)

This expression is substituted forfin the first equation to obtain as:

¹ó³¦´Ç²õθ−μk(¹ó²õ¾±²Ôθ−mg)=ma.

For a=0, the force is,

F=−μkmg³¦´Ç²õθ−μk²õ¾±²Ôθ

With μk=0.65, m=5.0 k²µ, and θ=70o, we can write the above expression as,

F=−0.65×5.0 k²µÃ—9.8″¾/²õ2cos70o−0.65sin70oF=118 N

Thus, the magnitude of the force must be 118 N for the stone to move at constant velocity.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

A house is built on the top of a hill with a nearby slope at angleθ=45°(Fig. 6-55). An engineering study indicates that the slope angle should be reduced because the top layers of soil along the slope might slip past the lower layers. If the coefficient of static friction between two such layers is 0.5, what is the least angle ϕthrough which the present slope should be reduced to prevent slippage?

In Fig. 6-23, a sled is held on an inclined plane by a cord pulling directly up the plane. The sled is to be on the verge of moving up the plane. In Fig. 6-28, the magnitude Frequired of the cord’s force on the sled is plotted versus a range of values for the coefficient of static frictionμs between sled and plane: F1=2.0N, F2=5.0N, and μ2=0.50. At what angle θis the plane inclined?

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