Direction of Friction for Rolling Motion

AI Thread Summary
When a ball is attached to a string and pulled, static friction accelerates it forward while tension causes rotation. On an incline, kinetic friction opposes motion and can provide torque, while static friction is also present but does not do work as it only acts on stationary points. The ball can start rolling with minimal tension since static friction is proportional to the applied force and not fixed. If an electric field acts on a charged ball on a frictional surface, the direction of friction will depend on the net force acting through the ball's center. Overall, static friction facilitates rolling without doing work, as it does not displace the contact point.
better361
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A ball is attached with a string on the side. When the string is pulled up, static friction accelerates the ball forward while the tension rotates the ball.
When a ball is placed on a incline with friction, is kinetic friction opposing the motion and giving the ball torque while gravity accelerates the ball down? Is there also static friction is this case?

Also, does the ball lose energy in either case due to friction?
 
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hi better361! :smile:
better361 said:
When a ball is placed on a incline with friction, is kinetic friction opposing the motion and giving the ball torque while gravity accelerates the ball down? Is there also static friction is this case?

Also, does the ball lose energy in either case due to friction?

in rolling (without slipping), there is only static friction (plus "rolling resistance" due to deformation)

does static friction ever do work? (hint: what is the definition of work done?)
A ball is attached with a string on the side. When the string is pulled up, static friction accelerates the ball forward while the tension rotates the ball.

what is the question? :confused:
 
So would the direction of static friction be pointing to up on the incline then if there is no kinetic friction?

I would say static friction doesn't do any work because it only applies to stationary objects, and the ball can be treated as one at a particular instant. Am I right?

Ohh, I was supposed to ask the similar questions on that problem as the incline one. I thought that the only way for the ball to accelerate on the level plane was from static friction, because the other two forces, the tension in the string and gravity, are added with the normal force so that there is no net force in the upwards direction.
So, would the tension need to overcome the torque from the static friction to start rolling or would the ball roll as soon as I apply a bit of tension to the string?

Also, if a uniform electric field were to act on a ball with some charge, and the ball is on a surface with friction, what direction is the friction when I let the ball go?
 
hi better361! :smile:

(i'm sorry for taking so long to reply :redface:)
better361 said:
I would say static friction doesn't do any work because it only applies to stationary objects, and the ball can be treated as one at a particular instant. Am I right?

yes, static friction from a stationary surface doesn't do work :smile:

work done, usually written as force "dot" displacement, is technically ∫ force "dot" velocity dt

the velocity is of the point of application of the force, so if (as here) that is stationary, the work done is zero

of course, if the surface the ball is on is moving, then the point of application is moving, and so the static friction does do work!

(eg a box on an accelerating trailer has increasing kinetic energy, supplied entirely by the static friction :wink:)​
Ohh, I was supposed to ask the similar questions on that problem as the incline one. I thought that the only way for the ball to accelerate on the level plane was from static friction, because the other two forces, the tension in the string and gravity, are added with the normal force so that there is no net force in the upwards direction.
So, would the tension need to overcome the torque from the static friction to start rolling or would the ball roll as soon as I apply a bit of tension to the string?

static friction is not fixed at µN, it is less than µN, and is proportional to the tension

so yes, it starts moving (rolling) even with a tiny amount of tension
Also, if a uniform electric field were to act on a ball with some charge, and the ball is on a surface with friction, what direction is the friction when I let the ball go?

the total electric force will act through the centre of the ball, so the result is the same as for any mechanical force (or torque) applied at the centre :wink:
 
tiny-tim said:
the total electric force will act through the centre of the ball, so the result is the same as for any mechanical force (or torque) applied at the centre :wink:

What makes the ball start to roll if the force is applied through the center? If static friction points in the direction of motion, what is supplying a torque in the opposite direction to make the ball roll properly?

tiny-tim said:
static friction is not fixed at µN, it is less than µN, and is proportional to the tension

so yes, it starts moving (rolling) even with a tiny amount of tension

How exactly is the static friction proportional to friction? If the equation is r(T-F)=Iα, where F is the force from friction, wouldn't T, tension, need to be greater than friction for rolling to occur?

Also, why does the direction of friction depend on the radius at which I apply the torque?(new scenario)
 
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bump on questions from my last post.
 
If there is force applied to the ball through the center, then the static friction exerted onto the surface of the ball is in the opposite direction of acceleration, resulting in angular acceleration or angular decleration of the ball.
 
Too much to say about this, you may get more precise answers if you have more precised question. However, I will try to help you with some of the above discussed issues:

1) The force could NOT be considered at the center unless the object behaves as a particle (no rotation, no deformation). The rotating ball is definitely not a particle, so the force could NOT be considered at the center.

2) If the ball is rolling upward on an inclined plane, then the static friction is also upward resisting the rotating motion of the ball.

3) The ball can roll at constant speed if T = f. If T > f, the ball will accelerate. But at the start, T should be greater than f to make the ball starts to move.

4) static friction does not do any work because its point of application (point of contact between the ball and the surface) does not undergo displacement; each new instant a new point of application exists with no displacement.
 
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