Acceleration from 2 Force Vectors

AI Thread Summary
To find the acceleration of a 2.00 kg object under two forces, F1 (30.0 N along the x-axis) and F2 (10.0 N at a 60-degree angle), the correct method involves calculating the components of the forces. The x-component of the resultant force is 35 N, and the y-component is approximately 8.66 N, leading to an acceleration of 17.67 m/s². The direction of the acceleration can be determined using the arctangent of the y-component divided by the x-component, which should yield the correct angle. A common mistake noted in the discussion is miscalculating the y-component of the second force. Properly calculating these components and their resultant will yield both the magnitude and direction of the acceleration accurately.
zcabral
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Homework Statement

Two forces, F1 and F2, act on a 2.00 kg object where F1 = 30.0 N (on the x-axis) and F2 = 10.0 N. A 60 degree angle is between them. Find the magnitude and direction of the acceleration.

http://www.webassign.net/pse/p5-15.gif (ignore figure a)

Homework Equations


F=ma
a=sqrt. (ax^2 + ay^2)

The Attempt at a Solution


I figured out that the magnitude is a=sqrt. (ax^2 + ay^2)
which is equal to 17.67

however i can't get the correct direction! i thought it would be theta = arctan (2.5 /17.5)= 8.13 but it keeps saying its not the right answer! help
 
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The angle should be arctan (a_y/a_x).
 
General rules for these problems:

Use units throughout.
Combine the two forces into a single one.
Show all work.
 
i did that and it didnt come out right
 
zcabral said:
i thought it would be theta = arctan (2.5 /17.5)= 8.13 but it keeps saying its not the right answer! help
Where did you get the numbers 2.5 and 17.5? What are they?
 
2.5= ay
17.5= ax

together they are the acceleration = 17.67 (im 100% sure)

i got them by using this technique
Fx= 30cos(0)+10cos(60)= 35
A=F/m A= 35/2 A= 17.5

Fy= 30sin(0)+10cos(60)= 5
A=F/m A= 5/2 A= 2.5
 
zcabral said:
2.5= ay
17.5= ax

together they are the acceleration = 17.67 (im 100% sure)

i got them by using this technique
Fx= 30cos(0)+10cos(60)= 35
A=F/m A= 35/2 A= 17.5

Fy= 30sin(0)+10cos(60)= 5
A=F/m A= 5/2 A= 2.5
Redo your calculation of Fy.
 
oops no i used sine just didnt type it out right here
 
zcabral said:
oops no i used sine just didnt type it out right here
But 10 \sin(60) \ne 5
 
  • #10
why is it the cos(0) and sin(0)
 
  • #11
portillj said:
why is it the cos(0) and sin(0)
Because the angle that the 30 N force makes with the x-axis is 0. (That force is along the x-axis.)
 
  • #12
how do i find out the angle is i have the magnitudes??
 
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