How Does Friction Affect the Motion of Blocks and a Pulley System?

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Friction significantly impacts the motion of blocks in a pulley system by introducing an additional force that must be accounted for in energy calculations. In the given scenario, the work done by friction is calculated using the formula W_f = F_f * distance, where F_f is the frictional force. The frictional force is determined by the coefficient of friction and the weight of the block on the ledge. This frictional work must be included in the energy equation, affecting the final speed and angular velocity of the system. Ultimately, understanding the role of friction is crucial for accurately predicting the motion and energy transformations in such systems.
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A 4kg block resting on a horizontal ledge is attached to his right to a string that passes over a pulley and is attached to a hanging 2kg block. The coefficient of friction between the ledge and the 4kg block is 0.25. The pulley is a uniform disk of radius 8cm and mass 0.6kg. a) Find the speed of the 2kg block after it falls from the rest a distance of 2.5m. b) What is the angular velocity of the pulley at this time?


Delta K + Delta U = 0
Because Ki=Uf = 0
½(m+M)v^2+1/2(I,pulley)w^2-mgh=0
½(m+M)v^2+1/2(1/2MR^2)(v^2/R^2)-mgh=0

so v = sqroot(2mgh/(M+m+1/2M,p))
v = sqroot(2(2kg)(9.81)(2.5)/(4kg+2kg+1/2(0.6kg))) =3.95m/s


b) w= v/r = (3.95m/s)/0.08m) = 49.5rad/s

I did solve it without the 0.25 coefficient of fiction though may you help me please?
 
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How much work does the friction do?
 
49.5rad/s * 0.25?
 
No.

Work = Force X Distance

It will be an extra term in the energy equation.
 
The work done by friction is going to be force times distance.

This would be easier to illustrate with a drawing, but it's going to be:
F_f=mg\mu_k
so
F_f=4 (9.81) 0.25=9.81
mow
W_f=9.81*2.5
you can plug that into your energy equation:
\frac{1}{2}(m_1+m_2)v^2+\frac{1}{2}I\omega^2+W_f-mgh=0

I think you've got the math under control from there.
 
thank you very much, I got it.
 
In response to your post:

E_{final}=E_{inital}

The work done by friction typically ends up as a temeperature change on the E_{final} side. It's just one more thing that you need to account for in the energy equation
 
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