View Full Version : nonconservative forces
imaqueen
Oct14-03, 03:36 PM
I am really having a hard time with this there is something I am missing can someone help
a 2100 kg car starts from rest at the top of a 5.0 m long driveway that is sloped at 20 Deg with the horizontal . if an average friction force of 4000 N impedes the motion find the speed of the car at the bottom of the driveway. The answer is 3.8m/s
Use newton's law F_total = m*a.
JMD
Astrophysics
Oct15-03, 04:19 AM
That's not entirely correct nbo10, first u need to calculate the Gravitational force on the truck, then you calculate the Fx, which will help you further.
p.s. don't forget the 20 degrees
Originally posted by Astrophysics
That's not entirely correct nbo10, first u need to calculate the Gravitational force on the truck, then you calculate the Fx, which will help you further.
p.s. don't forget the 20 degrees
No, I'm entirely correct. F_total includes gravitational foce and friction.
JMD
Astrophysics
Oct15-03, 03:15 PM
I think, I think more like a physics teacher, since I don't think F_total = m*a is very precise. I think emaqueen already knew about this equation.
HallsofIvy
Oct15-03, 07:02 PM
I'm puzzled by that. I will admit that I'm NOT a physics teacher so perhaps I don't think like one. But in a problem that talks about forces and asks for speed, I would think that F= ma would be key.
Perhaps you mean that we should do it by calculating the energy!
Okay, that's often a good way to do these problems. Initially, the car has 0 kinetic energy. Since the driveway is 5m long and sloped at 20 degrees, the height of the car at the top of the driveway is 5 sin(20)= 1.71 m and its potential energy is (2100)(9.8)(1.71)=
vBulletin® v3.8.7, Copyright ©2000-2012, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.