Need help finding the banking angle of a curved road please

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The discussion revolves around calculating the correct banking angle for a highway curve with a radius of 500 meters designed for vehicles traveling at 90 km/h. Initial calculations led to an incorrect angle of 89.6 degrees due to algebraic errors. Participants highlighted the need to correct the force equations and emphasized the importance of converting speed from km/h to m/s for accurate results. After addressing these issues, the recalculated angle was found to be 89.8 degrees. The conversation underscores the significance of proper unit conversion and accurate force diagram analysis in physics problems.
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A highway curve of radius 500m is designed for traffic moving 90 km/hr. What is the correct banking angle of the road?




I made a force diagram and wrote out the sums of the forces in the x and y then tried to solve for theta I got:

sumFx= -nsin theta=ma=mv^2/r

and

sumFy= -mg+ncos theta=0 --> n=mg/cos theta

then substituted n into the first


I ended up getting 89.6 degrees though...did I just make an algebra mistake or did I go about it the wrong way?
 
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I suspect you made an arithmetic mistake. Show the final steps where you solved for theta.
 
Your net Fx is incorrect, it should be Nsin(theta)=mv^2/R not -Nsin(theta)=mv^2/R
 
mg/cos(theta)*sin(theta)=mv^2/r

mg sin(theta)/cos(theta)=m(90^2)/500


10tan(theta)=8100/500

tan(theta)=162

theta=arctan 162

theta=89.6
 
Coronita said:
mg/cos(theta)*sin(theta)=mv^2/r

mg sin(theta)/cos(theta)=m(90^2)/500
Wrong units for the speed. Convert km/h to m/s.
 
Thanks! You're right on that one but now I get 89.8 degrees :P
 
Coronita said:
Thanks! You're right on that one but now I get 89.8 degrees :P
What's the correct speed?
 
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