Calculating Train Speed Using Centripetal Force | 15° Angle, 150m Radius

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Slam

Homework Statement


There is a subway derailed. Radius of an unbanked curve is 150 m. An unused strap hangs at a 15 degrees angle to the vertical just before the accident. Did the train exceed 35 km/h and what speed was it at just before the accident.

Homework Equations


F=ma=m(v^2/r)

The Attempt at a Solution


The angle of the Normal force is 75 degrees counterclockwise to the horizontal axis. The x-component of Force is m(v^2/r)=Ncos75
The y-component of Force is 0=Nsin75-mg
m=(Nsin75)/g Substitute this in for m in the x-component
((Nsin75)/g)(v^2/r)=Ncos75
v^2=g*r*tan75
g=35.28 km/h
r=.150 km
v=4.44 km/h
 
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You have the wrong numerical value for g. Probably resulting from using the wrong physical dimension. The gravitational acceleration is 9.8 m/s^2, not 9.8 m/s. The unit km/h is a unit of velocity, not of acceleration.

You should note that your equation would not be dimensionally consistent if g had dimension L/T.
 
Slam said:
g=35.28 km/h
This is dimensionally and numerically incorrect..
Work with consistent units: 1km = 1000m
1hr = 3600 sec.
That's why they invented the SI unit system! :smile:
Everything else you did looks right.
The answer is way higher than what you came up with.