Calculate Force in Newtons From 95 lb Weight Falling 1m

  • Thread starter Thread starter Oh the irony
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Calculation
AI Thread Summary
To calculate the force in Newtons from a 95-pound weight falling 1 meter, first convert pounds to mass in kilograms using the conversion factor of 1 pound mass = 0.45359237 kilograms. The gravitational acceleration is 9.81 m/s², so the force can be calculated using F = mg, where m is the mass in kilograms. After conversion, the force is approximately 42.2 Newtons, not 9.7 Newtons as initially calculated. It's important to distinguish between pound-force and pound-mass to avoid confusion in calculations.
Oh the irony
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Alright, well.
How do I get mass out of pounds?
I need to figure out what the force is in Newtons on someone when they fall 1 meter.

The person weighs 95 pounds.

Do I need to convert it to kilograms then divide that by the gravitational constant of 9.81 m/s?

or can I just do 95/9.81?


1/1 = 1m/s^2

0 ~ 1 / 1s = 1m/s^2

9.7 x 1 = 9.7

F = 9.7


First I did speed, which was 1/1 (1 meter for 1 second) = 1m/s^2

Then I did acceleration, and then M x A = 9.7

Is it correct?



NOTE: This is not homework.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Pounds are units of force, like Newtons, so you'd convert them to Newtons first, then divide by the 9.81 [m/s^2]. Converting pounds to kilograms would be as meaningless as converting Newtons to kilograms.

The unit of mass in the US is called 'slugs'. I've never seen them used before personally. But you could convert slugs to kilograms.
 
Pythagorean said:
Pounds are units of force, like Newtons, so you'd convert them to Newtons first, then divide by the 9.81 [m/s^2]. Converting pounds to kilograms would be as meaningless as converting Newtons to kilograms.

The unit of mass in the US is called 'slugs'. I've never seen them used before personally. But you could convert slugs to kilograms.


How do I convert them to Newtons? I did

95/ 9.81 = 9.7

so isn't the force 9.7 Newtons? or how do i get Newtons?
 
Oh the irony said:
How do I convert them to Newtons? I did

95/ 9.81 = 9.7

so isn't the force 9.7 Newtons? or how do i get Newtons?

The equation is:

F = ma
(force) = (mass)*(acceleration)

some examples of this in both systems:

Newtons = (grams) * (meters/second^2)

or:

pounds = (slugs)*(miles/hour^2)

In this case, the acceleration a is g, so a = g.

So F = mg, therefore, the force is your value before dividing by g. So, as I said, convert the force from pounds to Newtons, then divide by gravity.

You can easily do this conversion by typing "x pounds in Newtons" into google
 
lol I'm not really understanding, its only possible for me to learn if someone does the whole calculation and I can actually see it.


Can you do it for me?

The object is falling for 1 second and went 1 meter in that 1 second.

I want to know the force that it hits the ground.

can you show all the math please?
 
The normal unit of mass in english units is a slug, but it's common to specify "pound mass" as opposed to "pound force". The weight of a person is commonly expressed in pounds (force) or in kilograms (mass), without causing confusion. To answer your question:

1 pound_mass = 0.45359237 kilograms
 
comparing a flat solar panel of area 2π r² and a hemisphere of the same area, the hemispherical solar panel would only occupy the area π r² of while the flat panel would occupy an entire 2π r² of land. wouldn't the hemispherical version have the same area of panel exposed to the sun, occupy less land space and can therefore increase the number of panels one land can have fitted? this would increase the power output proportionally as well. when I searched it up I wasn't satisfied with...
Back
Top