Solving Forces and Acceleration Problems in Physics - Study Group Help

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A high school study group is struggling with a physics problem involving two forces acting on a car, requiring them to find the resultant force and the car's acceleration. The forces are 400 Newtons at 30 degrees northeast and 450 Newtons at 10 degrees northwest. Participants are advised to break the forces into their x and y components, sum these components to find the resultant force, and then calculate the angle using trigonometric functions. The group is confused about the calculations and the discrepancy between their results and the book's answers. Emphasis is placed on understanding vector components and applying the Pythagorean theorem to determine the resultant force's magnitude accurately.
caity232
Hello, I am a junior in High School and some of my friends in my physics class and I have a study group for our weekly bookwork that our teacher assigns. We have tried all week to figure out this one problem but to no avail. The problem is as follows:
Two forces are applied to a car in an effort to move it. A)What is the resultant of these two forces? B) If
the car has a mass of 3000 Kg, what acceleration does
it have?

the diagram of the car shows that it is being pulled
in two different directions one arrow is pointing
northeast with a force of 400 Newtons at an angle of
30 degrees, and the other direction is northwest at an angle
of 10 degrees and a force of 450 Newtons.

I tried using 400cos30 and 450cos10, but it doesn't work. The answers are in the back of the book, but I'm looking for how to do the math and I don't want to just copy the answers down because I would like to know how to solve this. If it helps, the answers are:
A) 789 Newtons at 8.8 degrees to the right of forward direction
B) 0.266 m/s^2 in direcrion of resultant force
Thank you in advance, and please help me with the math in this problem.
 
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I tried using 400cos30 and 450cos10, but it doesn't work.
Close, very close.

You have to remember that acceleration is also a vector, and so also need to be seen in terms of components.

So, what you want to do is first to define a coordinate system. Put North as y, say, and East as x.

Then, you 400cos30, 400sin30 and so on to put to two forces in component form along the two directions, and then sum the x components and sum the y components. Now you have the resultant force in component form.

From the presentation of the answer, you need then to calculate the angle and magnitude of this force. For that use pythagoras and arctan.

For acceleration, it's an easy matter of using f=ma on the magnitude.
 
when you add the x and y components you get 1067.71 ... when i did 400cos30 and 400sin30 i got 546.41 and when i did 450cos10 and 450sin10 i got 1067.71... The answer in the back of the book in 789? Can I have some further help with this?
 
Why are you adding the x and y components? The length of a vector is not the length of its components. Once you have found the components and add "x to x" and "y to y" to find the resultant, you can use "Pythagorean Theorem" to find the length.
 
it still doesn't give you 789
 
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