Maybe, it could be more clear.
The string has a tension, right?
So they say, the string exerts force on the pulley. But in which direction?
haruspex said:
Tension (likewise compression) is not so much a force as a pair of equal and opposite forces.
In string-over-pulley questions, it often helps to consider the portion of string in contact with the pulley as being part of the pulley.
With that in mind, consider the vertical segment of string. The suspended weight exerts a force T on that. If we take the string to be massless, what force must the pulley exert on it?
Still don't get it.
The reason that I want to know this, or figure it out, I have another question.
Maybe it is better to open a new thread, But to solve my problem about string and pulley thing could be helpful.
This question is the main reason to open this thread.
The mass of the weight hanging off the side is greater than that resting on top of the cart. We have a pulley is set up on a cart, with a massless pulley and string. The mass hanging off the side is attached via a rail, and all surfaces & pulley are frictionless except between the tires and the ground (rolling).
When the system is released from rest, What about car's motion?
The only thing that I know is the string has tension and that affects the pulley or exerts force on the pulley. And the pulley is set up on a cart which is they are integrated.
If I find out the exerted force with vectors on the pulley by the string, I think I will be able to find car's motion direction.
I wanted to start with a basic problem to understand exerted force by a string on the pulley. But I am misunderstood.
This is the real reason.