How Does a Pulley System Affect Tension on an Inclined Plane?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the tension in a pulley system involving two boxes on different surfaces, one on an inclined plane and the other on a horizontal surface. For the given scenario with m2 = 1 kg and m1 = 3 kg, the tension in the cord was calculated to be 3.1 N when a horizontal force of 2.3 N is applied. Participants clarified the setup and equations, ensuring that the horizontal force acts on m1 and discussed the conditions under which the cord would become slack. The largest force before slack occurs was determined to be 14.7 N, indicating the relationship between tension and acceleration in the system. The calculations and concepts were verified and clarified throughout the conversation.
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A box of mass m2 = 1 kg on a frictionless plane inclined at angle θ = 30°. It is connected by a cord of negligible mass to a box of mass m1 = 3 kg on a horizontal frictionless surface. The pulley is frictionless and massless.

m1 O
---------------------\
\
-------------------30 \ m2
----------------------- \

(a) If the magnitude of horizontal force is 2.3 N, what is the tension in the connecting cord?

(b) What is the largest value the magnitude of may have without the cord becoming slack?

m1
F+T=m1a
2.3+T =3a

m2
sin30 m2g - T = m2a
4.9-T=a

substitution
2.3+T = 3(4.9-T)
4T = 12.4-2.3
T = 3.1N

I'm not sure if this is correct, can somebody verify this for me and give me a hint on how to do part b)?

thanks in advance
 
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Hi pikapika1,

pikapika1 said:
A box of mass m2 = 2.60 kg on a frictionless plane inclined at angle θ = 33°. It is connected by a cord of negligible mass to a box of mass m1 = 4.00 kg on a horizontal frictionless surface. The pulley is frictionless and massless.

m1 O
---------------------\
\
30\ m2
----------------------- \

(a) If the magnitude of horizontal force is 2.3 N, what is the tension in the connecting cord?

(b) What is the largest value the magnitude of may have without the cord becoming slack?

m1
F+T=m1a

I don't think it was clear from your post about what the horizontal force was. Based on this equation, I'm guessing that the horizontal force is acting on m1 and is directed toward the incline; is that correct?

2.3+T =3a

m2
sin30 m2g - T = m2a
4.9-T=a

This line seems to be wrong; it is missing the m2 from the previous line.
 
the horizontal force is applied on m1

and since m2 = 1kg
i simplified it to m2a = a
 
pikapika1 said:
the horizontal force is applied on m1

and since m2 = 1kg
i simplified it to m2a = a

What happened to the original problem? As you can see from what I quoted in my previous post, you had m2=2.6 kg, a different m1, and a different angle.
 
alphysicist said:
What happened to the original problem? As you can see from what I quoted in my previous post, you had m2=2.6 kg, a different m1, and a different angle.

yea sorry i realized that my numbers were messed up. Could you help me with the latter numbers that i have given?
 
pikapika1 said:
yea sorry i realized that my numbers were messed up. Could you help me with the latter numbers that i have given?


The tension you found (3.1 N) looks correct to me for those numbers.

For part b, if the rope has just barely become slack, what does that indicate about the tension in the rope and the accelerations of the two objects?
 
so find F when T = 0?
 
pikapika1 said:
so find F when T = 0?

That's right; and also the objects are still moving at the same rate. What do you get?
 
so find F when T = 0?

f= m1a
a= f/m1

m2gsin30=m2a
m2gsin30*m1/(m2) = f
f= 14.7N
 
  • #10
pikapika1 said:
so find F when T = 0?

f= m1a
a= f/m1

m2gsin30=m2a
m2gsin30*m1/(m2) = f
f= 14.7N

That looks right to me.
 

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