N, which is not the case.Find Coefficient of Static Friction for 6.65 kg Box

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To find the coefficient of static friction for a 6.65 kg box requiring a force of 21.2 N to start moving, the equation F ≤ μ_s * N is used, where N is the normal force. The normal force equals the weight of the box, calculated as mg, which is approximately 65.2 N. The coefficient of static friction (μ_s) can be derived by rearranging the equation to μ_s = F/N. When the box accelerates at 0.400 m/s² under the same applied force, the coefficient of kinetic friction can be determined using the equation F_applied + F_friction = F_resultant. Proper notation and understanding of forces are crucial for solving these friction-related problems.
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A force of 21.2 N is required to start a 6.65 kg box moving across a horizontal concrete floor. What is the coefficient of static friction between the box and the floor?

I've drawn my free body diagram and found that the y motion is N^F,B-W^E,B=0 I also know that the Force is larger than the friction
21.2 N - friction = 6.65a acceleration is not zero in this case right cause if it were zero than the friction would be 21.2
 
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Speaking in components parallel to the floor, u*Fn + Fapplied = 0 for a box to start moving at a constant (but slow) velocity. Or..

u * m * g <= -21.2N in this case because the force applied needs to be a teeny bit larger than static friction where u is the coefficient of static/kinetic friction.
 
really don't understand ur problem or possibly the notation u have used
N^F,B-W^E,B=0 ??

Anyways ...
F <= mu_s*N
and this resists ur applied force
consider the equilibrium and finish ur work

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Excellent, thanks for the help. What I was missing was the propper equation for the problem. This is the other half of the problem and I know it uses a slightly different equation but I don't know what that is.

If the 21.2 N force continues, the box accelerates at 0.400 m/s2. What is the coefficient of kinetic friction?

(sorry about the notation thing I should've used lower case letters instead of coefficents.)
 
same equation except sum of the forces isn't 0 anymore:

Fapplied + Ffriction = Fresultant

21.2N + u*Fnormal = m*0.4

careful with the sign on Fnormal.
 
Isn't Fnormal just 21.2N*-9.8?
 
R U still around? =(
 
If the box isn't moving horizontally, then the normal force N is equal to the weight of the box mg.
 

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