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newcool
Oct25-04, 08:58 PM
Hi, I have been given this problem to do as extra credit:

An inventive child named Pat wants to reach an apple in a tree without climbing the tree. Sitting in a chair connected to a rope that passes over a frictionless pulley, Pat pulls on the loose end of the rope with such a force that the spring scale reads 250 N. Pat’s true weight is 320 N, and the chair weights 160 N.

Show that the acceleration of the system of Pat and the chair is upward and find its magnitude.

Find the force Pat exerts on the chair.

Diagram:
http://www.geocities.com/newc00l/physics.html

I made 3 free body diagrams, one of the child with the chair, one of the spring scale and one of the spring inside the spring scale, but am at a loss to generate the necessary equations and am stuck.

Thanks in advance for any help.

spacetime
Oct25-04, 11:14 PM
The scale tells you the tension in the rope. The rope pulls on the child with the same force as the child pulls on the rope - which is the same as tension.
Moreover, the chair is also pulled by the rope with the same force. So the total upward force on the child is twice of the tension in the rope.

The total downward force is known. So, the answer is easily calculated.


spacetime
www.geocities.com/physics_all/index.html

newcool
Nov2-04, 05:46 PM
I made a free body diagram and solved part A to be .408 m/s/s
500
^
|
Pat and Chair ^A
49 kg
|
480 N

500 - 480 = 49a
20 = 49a
a = .408

How do you solve part B?

Leong
Nov2-04, 09:32 PM
I think when Pat pulls the loose end of the rope, the downward forces acting on the scale will be the pulling force of 250 N plus the weigh of Pat and the chair. If the scale is consider to be massless, the from Newton's 2nd Law :
T= 250 N + 320 N +160N=730N

newcool
Nov2-04, 09:36 PM
Hey Leong,

if Pat exerts 730 newtons on the chair then the whole system would fly down.

The answer is somewhere between 50 and 100 newtons.

Leong
Nov2-04, 09:40 PM
Pat doesn't exert 730 N, he only exerts 250 N the rest is coming from his and the chair weight.

Leong
Nov2-04, 09:43 PM
If what i assume is correct, then the accleration will be 5.11 m/s^2 and the normal force Pat exerts on the chair is 487 N.

newcool
Nov2-04, 09:46 PM
The tension in the rope is 2T = 250 *2 = 500 because it's a pulley system. I think you made a mistake somewhere because the answer is between 50 and 100 newtons.

Leong
Nov2-04, 09:50 PM
Sorry if i have misguided you.

newcool
Nov2-04, 09:51 PM
no problem, I thank you for your efforts because this is not an easy problem. That's the whole point of these forums, to get people to try to help others on hard problems. Trying is the important part.

Leong
Nov4-04, 03:46 AM
I went to a bookstore today to buy a book but it wasn't there anymore. because i was there already, i went through a few physics book to find a similar problem to yours and i found exactly the same question in one book and it had the answers. a=0.409 m/s^2 and N=83.3 N.
consider the chair : there are 3 forces acting on the chair. The normal force, N, Pat exerts on the chair, its weight and the tension of the rope. so, from Newton's 2nd Law :
T-W_{chair}-N=m_{chair}a
then, N=83.3 N

HallsofIvy
Nov4-04, 07:34 AM
Pat weighs 320 N but since he/she is pulling down on the rope with 250 N the rope is pulling up on him with 250 N. He is "pressing down" on the chair with 320-250= 70 N. The total weight he has to lift is 70+ 160= 230 N. Since that's less than 250 N, there is a "lifting" force of 250-230= 20 N.