Solve the coefficient of friction in a problem involving circular motion

AI Thread Summary
To determine the coefficient of static friction for a car on a banked curve, the problem involves a curve radius of 88m and speeds of 75km/hr and 95km/hr. The relevant equations include the relationship between centripetal force and friction, where friction must equal the centripetal force required to prevent skidding. The user initially calculated the forces but realized an error in converting speed from km/hr to m/s, which affected the final result. The correct approach involves using the formula µ = v^2/(gr) after ensuring all units are consistent. The expected coefficient of static friction is 0.22, as indicated in the textbook.
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Homework Statement


If a curve with a radius of 88m is perfectly banked for a car traveling 75km/hr, what must be the coefficient of static friction for a car not to skid when traveling at 95km/hr?


Homework Equations


i guess relevant equations would be tan θ = v^2/rg, but its says next to friction not needed?
f=ma or fr=mar
and Ffr = µs x Fn


The Attempt at a Solution



I made a free body diagram and since it said it was banked i set that in the y-axis there's no acceleration, so following the book (Giancoli), I got Fn=mg/cos θ. I solved for that and got 95^2/(88)(9.8) = .40 then inverse tan 10.46 or 84.5 for the angle

then in the x-axis i got Fn sin θ - Ffr = mar for the sum of the forces. I substituted Ffr for µs x Fn and Fn = mg cos θ. I
I then had Fn sin θ - µs mg cos θ = mar
I divided mass from both sides and divided both sides by m.
I then for ar substituted v^2/r
Then I isolated µs by dividing cos θ and subtracting Fn sin θ
So I then had µs = V^2/r x cos θ - Fn sin θ
I plugged everything in and I got 9015, I know this wrong just by looking at it, the back of the book says .22, I am completely clueless, so if anyone could help, I'd greatly appreciate it. Sorry if it is a little confusing.
 
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The centripetal force of the car is caused by friction

The car is accelerating at a = \frac{v^2}{r}

Equating the force of friction and the centripetal force, we have

F_f = \mu F_N = ma

\mu * mg = \frac{mv^2}{r}

\mu = \frac{v^2}{gr}
 
thank you, I forgot to convert 95km/hr to m/s too, anyways thanks again!
 
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