Magnitude of object with constant speed

AI Thread Summary
In a physics problem involving a 6 kg box pushed at a constant speed of 0.35 m/s with a coefficient of kinetic friction of 0.12, the normal force must be calculated using the weight of the box, which is 58.86 N (6 kg multiplied by the acceleration due to gravity, 9.81 m/s²). The net force is zero since the box is moving at constant velocity, leading to the conclusion that the applied force equals the frictional force. The frictional force can be calculated as F_f = μ * F_N, resulting in a frictional force of approximately 7.06 N. Therefore, the magnitude of the applied force F must also be 7.06 N to maintain constant speed. Understanding the relationship between normal force, friction, and applied force is crucial for solving such problems.
Kamirusen
Messages
3
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


in the physics laboratory experiment, a 6 kg box is pushed across a flat table by horizontal force F. if the box is moving at a constant speed of 0.35 m/s and the coefficient of kinetic friction is 0.12. what is the magnitude of F.


Homework Equations


F=μ*Fn
where
F = friction
μ = coefficient of friction
Fn = normal force

Fn = mass of object * acceleration


The Attempt at a Solution



i solve for Fn first,
Fn = 6 kg * 0 m/s2
and got an answer of zero for normal force... i let the acceleration to be zero because it says that it has constant speed... Is it normal to have a zero normal force?

and then when i solve for the magnitude of friction...
F = 0.12*0
which is zero also... O.o...

i'm not sure if i got a wrong equation, but i think its correct... or if i got some wrong interpretation of the given values that results to zero friction...

My question is, is it a normal thing for an object with constant speed to have a zero friction?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Kamirusen said:
Fn = normal force

Fn = mass of object * acceleration
That's not how you find the normal force. Consider the vertical forces acting on the box.
 
thanks for reply...

so ill going to consider the acceleration due to gravity of an object with no horizontal acceleration?
 
First and fore most, never solve Newton Laws Problems without FBD. Draw the figure and correctly denote the directions in which the forces acts. Use F(net)=Ma along x-y axes. See what happens.
 
Kamirusen said:
so ill going to consider the acceleration due to gravity of an object with no horizontal acceleration?
Sure. You'll need it to find the object's weight.

Just because you might use the acceleration due to gravity does not mean the object must be accelerating. Think of the acceleration due to gravity as a measure of the strength of the Earth's gravitational field.
 
In this case
##F_N=mg## m = mass, g=gravity, gravity pulls down with 9.81m/s^2 so find normal force
##F_N=6kg*9.81\frac{m}{s^2}=58.86N##
If you're trying to move the body in constant velocity then
##F_{net}=0## because:
##F_{net}=ma##
##F-F_f=ma##
##F-F_f=m * 0##
##F-F_f=0## so friction is equal to pushing force.
so simply find friction ##F_f=\mu F_N## and that's the pushing force
 
thanks ! its clearer now... :)
 
Back
Top