Discover the Coefficient of Kinetic Friction on a Slide with a 26° Incline

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The coefficient of kinetic friction between a child and a slide with a 26° incline is calculated to be 0.43. The calculation involves analyzing the forces acting on the child, including gravitational force components and frictional force opposing motion. The derived formula incorporates the acceleration due to gravity and the angle of incline, leading to the conclusion that the kinetic friction coefficient is essential for understanding the child's speed on a frictional slide compared to a frictionless one.

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Need explanation, please~~

A child slides down a slide with a 26° incline, and at the bottom her speed is precisely one-third what it would have been if the slide had been frictionless. Calculate the coefficient of kinetic friction between the slide and the child.


I get as an answer 0.43 as the coeficient of kinetic friction.

Some ideas please post back.

Thanks.
 
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ISU20CpreE said:
A child slides down a slide with a 26° incline, and at the bottom her speed is precisely one-third what it would have been if the slide had been frictionless. Calculate the coefficient of kinetic friction between the slide and the child.


I get as an answer 0.43 as the coeficient of kinetic friction.

Some ideas please post back.

Thanks.

I'm so sorry for violating the rules of the site. I am a new member and I am learning from my mistakes. I solved the problem, but i don't understand some parts of the problem. This is my procedure:

The kinetic friction force will be up the slide to oppose the motion.
We choose the positive direction in the direction of the acceleration.
From the force diagram for the child, we have ?F = ma:
x-component: mg sin [tex]\theta[\tex] – Ffr = ma;<br /> y-component: FN – mg cos [tex]\theta[\tex] = 0.<br /> When we combine these, we get<br /> a = g sin [tex]\theta[\tex] – [tex]\mu[\tex]kg cos [tex]\theta[\tex] = g(sin [tex]\theta[\tex] – [tex]\mu[\tex]k cos [tex]\theta[\tex]).<br /> We can use this for the frictionless slide if we set [tex]theta[\tex]k = 0.<br /> For the motion of the child, we have<br /> v2 = v02 + 2a(x – x0) = 0 + 2ad, where d is the distance along the slide.<br /> If we form the ratio for the two slides, we get<br /> (vfriction/vnone)2 = afriction/anone = (sin [tex]\theta[\tex] – [tex]\mu[\tex]k cos [tex]\theta[\tex])/sin [tex]\theta[\tex];<br /> (!)2 = (sin 28° – [tex]\mu[\tex]k cos 28°)/sin 28°, which gives [tex]\mu[\tex]k = 0.40.[/tex][/tex][/tex][/tex][/tex][/tex][/tex][/tex][/tex][/tex][/tex][/tex][/tex][/tex][/tex]
 

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