Frictional Force & Normal forces

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the normal force and static frictional force acting on a parked car on an incline of 18.7 degrees. The normal force is determined as the y-component of the gravitational force, calculated to be approximately 17,080.10 N. The static frictional force, derived from the x-component of the gravitational force, is approximately 5,781.29 N. Participants clarify that these forces balance out, resulting in no net movement in either direction. The conversation emphasizes the importance of understanding force components in relation to inclined planes.
onyxorca
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Homework Statement



A car (m = 1840 kg) is parked on a road that rises 18.7 ° above the horizontal. What are the magnitudes of (a) the normal force and (b) the static frictional force that the ground exerts on the tires?

Homework Equations



F=ma Fg=mg Ff=uN

The Attempt at a Solution



errr... what forces cancels out? is it FN=Fg=Ff or is it FN+Fg+Ff=0? i don't remember...
 
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On your free body diagram, at the angle of θ=18.7°, what are the forces acting? (After you split the weight of the car into components parallel to the road and perpendicular to the road)
 
frictional force, force of gravity, and normal force.
 
onyxorca said:
frictional force, force of gravity, and normal force.

So if there is no net movement perpendicular to the road, that is the magnitude of the normal force?
 
rock.freak667 said:
So if there is no net movement perpendicular to the road, that is the magnitude of the normal force?

the same as the gravitational force? 1 840 * 9.8 = 18 032 N?
 
onyxorca said:
the same as the gravitational force? 1 840 * 9.8 = 18 032 N?

No, the component of the weight perpendicular to the plane is equal to the normal force.
 
so that's equal to the y-component of the gravitational force?

18032 cos(18.7deg ) = 17080.10 N

and so frictional force is 18032sin18.7=5781.29 N ?
 
onyxorca said:
so that's equal to the y-component of the gravitational force?

18032 cos(18.7deg ) = 17080.10 N

and so frictional force is 18032sin18.7=5781.29 N ?

Yes but only because the net force in the x and y directions are zero.
 
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