Does acceleration due to gravity increase or decrease in an elevator?

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SUMMARY

The acceleration due to gravity remains constant at 9.8 m/s² regardless of the motion of an elevator. When an elevator accelerates upwards, the normal force increases, but this does not alter the gravitational force acting on the object. Instead, the net force is the sum of the normal force and gravitational force, leading to an effective upward acceleration that can be calculated by adding the elevator's acceleration to the gravitational acceleration. The discussion clarifies that while the forces interact, the acceleration due to gravity itself does not change.

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  • Understanding of Newton's Second Law (F=ma)
  • Basic knowledge of forces: gravitational force and normal force
  • Familiarity with acceleration concepts in physics
  • Knowledge of vector direction in physics (positive and negative axes)
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  • Study the implications of net force in various acceleration scenarios
  • Explore the concept of normal force in different contexts, such as inclined planes
  • Learn about the effects of gravitational acceleration in free fall and other motion types
  • Investigate advanced topics in classical mechanics, such as dynamics of elevators
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how does the acceleration used in the formula f=ma change when the acceleration changes. you start at 9.8 m/s2. you get in an elevator or you move upward, changing the acceleration. how does acceleration due to gravity change? increase or decrease?

thanks
 
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the acceleration due to gravity stays the same.

You have two forces, the normal force, and the gravitational force. The force of gravity continues to press downard with the same magnitude, but the normal force increases. This is why you move up (Note the total force is the sum of the forces)
 
so an upward acceleration of say, one m/s2 would just be added to g? meaning total acceleration for f=ma would be 10.8?
 
No. Here's how it works. Your object starts with two forces, fg, force of gravity, and fn the normal force. The force of gravity has a downward acceleration of 9.8 m/s2, which we'll call negative because we defined the y-axis to be positive pointing upwards, while the normal force starts with an upward acceleration of 9.8 This is why you don't move, because the net force Fnet = fn + fg which means:

ma = mg + m(-g) = 0 implies a=0

So if you accelerate upwards with a magnitude of 1 m/s2, the normal force increases so the acceleration of that force is g+1. This means
Fnet = fn + fg gives us

ma = m(g+1) + m(-g) = m(g+1-g) = m

So a=1 m/22, as expected.

I think you should talk to your physics teacher about this, because you seem to a bit confused as to what net force is
 
that was beautiful. much thanks.
 

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