Kinematics - Find static friction coefficient of a coffee cup

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the coefficient of static friction for a coffee cup sliding on a dashboard during deceleration and finding the friction force for a box on an incline. For the coffee cup problem, the user derived the coefficient of static friction as approximately 0.324 based on the deceleration from 40 km/h to rest in 3.5 seconds. In the second problem, the user calculated the weight components of an 18-kg box on a 37-degree incline and found the friction force to be 101.3 N, leading to a coefficient of friction of 0.719. Both problems illustrate the application of Newton's laws and trigonometric functions in determining frictional forces. The calculations provided are confirmed to be correct for both scenarios.
Elvis
Messages
14
Reaction score
0
Hi !

Can anyone help me I need help ...

Problem :
************************************************** **********************
1- A coffee cup on the dashboard of a car slides forward on the dash when the driver decelerates from 40 km/h to rest in 3.5 s or less, but not if he decelerates in a longer time. What is the coefficient of static friction between the cup and the dash ?
************************************************** ********************
2- An 18-kg box is released on a 37*(grade) incline and accelerates down the incline at 0.270 m/s(square). Find the friction force impeding its motion. How large is the coefficient of friction
************************************************** ********************

Thanks !
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
what have you tried?
 
Problem 1:
I now that :

F = F
uN = ma
umg = ma
ug = a
u(9.8) = (40km/h * 1h/3600s * 1000m/km)/3.5s
u = 0.324

Is this correct ?

Can anyone help me for the problem 2 ?

Thanks
 
Last edited:
Problem 2
I have solved these problem ::::::The weight of the box is (18 kg)(9.80 N/kg) = 176.4 N
The component of the weight parallel to the plane is
(176.4 N)sin(37.0o) = 106.16 N

The component of the weight perpendicular to the plane is
(176.4 N)cos(37.0o) = 140.88 N
So now our expression of Newton's second law has the parallel component of gravity of 106.16 N down (-) the plane, and assuming it is moving down the plane as well as accelerating down the plane, the force of friction F is acting up (+) the plane, and the acceleration is .270 m/s/s down (-) the plane, so:
<F - 106.16 N> = (18.0 kg)(-.270 m/s/s)
F = 101.3 N = 101 N, and the coefficient of friction is given by
Ffr = mkFn
The Normal force in this case is the perpendicular component of gravity 140.88 N, so we have:
Ffr = mkFn
101.3 N = mk(140.88 N)
So mk = .719
 
There you go!You're done!
 
I multiplied the values first without the error limit. Got 19.38. rounded it off to 2 significant figures since the given data has 2 significant figures. So = 19. For error I used the above formula. It comes out about 1.48. Now my question is. Should I write the answer as 19±1.5 (rounding 1.48 to 2 significant figures) OR should I write it as 19±1. So in short, should the error have same number of significant figures as the mean value or should it have the same number of decimal places as...
Thread 'A cylinder connected to a hanging mass'
Let's declare that for the cylinder, mass = M = 10 kg Radius = R = 4 m For the wall and the floor, Friction coeff = ##\mu## = 0.5 For the hanging mass, mass = m = 11 kg First, we divide the force according to their respective plane (x and y thing, correct me if I'm wrong) and according to which, cylinder or the hanging mass, they're working on. Force on the hanging mass $$mg - T = ma$$ Force(Cylinder) on y $$N_f + f_w - Mg = 0$$ Force(Cylinder) on x $$T + f_f - N_w = Ma$$ There's also...
Back
Top