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dirtybirdhouse183
Jan1-07, 04:03 PM
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data

A block is on a frictionless horizontal surface. A force of 20 N is applied to the block at an angle of 30 degrees to the horizontal. If the mass of the block is 5 kg, what is the acceleration of the block?

The choices for acceleration are: a) 5.3 b) 6.2 c) 7.5 d) 4.7 e)3.2
2. Relevant equations

Do I need to compute the vertical forces acting on the block?

3. The attempt at a solution

So I am guessing that the horizontal component of the force is the force that causes the block to accelerate, or move. So then the horizontal force would be 20cos30 which is 17N. Then I divided that by the mass to get the acceleration but it's wrong.

lizzyb
Jan1-07, 04:41 PM
I did what you did:
F_x = \cos 30 \cdot 20 = m a_x
F_y = \sin 30 \cdot 20 - n = 0
so a_x = \frac {\cos 30 \cdot 20}{5} = .62

Doc Al
Jan1-07, 04:48 PM
So I am guessing that the horizontal component of the force is the force that causes the block to accelerate, or move. So then the horizontal force would be 20cos30 which is 17N. Then I divided that by the mass to get the acceleration but it's wrong.
Your method is correct; the answer is not among those given (although one of them is pretty close).

so a_x = \frac {\cos 30 \cdot 20}{5} = .62
Check your arithmetic.

dirtybirdhouse183
Jan1-07, 04:54 PM
Yes, my acceleration was 3.46, but there acceleration is 3.2. Hopefully, the answer choices aren't incorrect lol. Thanks for the replies though, I really apperciate them.