How Fast Does a Box Travel After Being Pulled with Force and Friction?

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A 1.50 * 10^2 N force pulls a 50.0 kg box at a 25° angle on a horizontal surface, with a coefficient of friction of 0.250. The initial calculations incorrectly assumed the normal force without accounting for the vertical component of the pulling force. The correct approach involves calculating the normal force as the weight minus the vertical component of the pulling force. This adjustment leads to a more accurate calculation of friction and the net horizontal force. Ultimately, the correct speed of the box after being pulled is determined to be 2.53 m/s.
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A 1.50 * 10^2 N force is pulling a 50.0 kg box along a horizontal surface. The force acts at an angle of 25.0°. If this force acts through a displacement of 12.0 m, and the coefficient of friction in 0.250, what is the speed of the box, assuming it started from rest?
 
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this is how i attempted to solve the question:

Fg=mg
=(50kg)(-9.81m/s2)
= -491 N

Fnet=Fn-Fg
Fn= 491 N

Ff=uFn
=(0.250)(491N)
=123 N

W=Ek
W=Fd
W=(123 N)(12.0 m)
W=1472 J

Ek=1/2mv2
V=squareroot 2Ek/m
V=squareroot 2(1472 J)/(50.0 kg)
V= 7.7 m/s

The actual answer is 2.53 m/s. Can you tell me what i am doing wrong, thanks.
 
A 1.50 * 10^2 N force is pulling a 50.0 kg box along a horizontal surface. The force acts at an angle of 25.0°. If this force acts through a displacement of 12.0 m, and the coefficient of friction in 0.250, what is the speed of the box, assuming it started from rest?

im going to call the 1.5*10^2 N Fp

okay. the normal force is the weight minus the vertical component of the force, becaues the force is at an angle of 25 degrees, right? so its weight-Fpsin25

use that to calculate friction, mu*normal

horizontal force is then Fpcos25-Ffriction

divide that by 50 kg to get acceleration, reduces to a kinematics problem
you get?
 
thanks i got the answer
 
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