Understanding Gravity: The Role of Forces in Momentum Questions

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In momentum questions involving forces, such as a man diving into water or a stuntman landing on a mattress, it's crucial to account for both the upward force exerted by the medium and the downward force of gravity. The total force exerted by the mattress or water is the sum of the force needed to decelerate the person and the force required to support their weight, represented as (mass)(acceleration of medium) + 9.8(mass). This reflects Newton's second law, which states that the net force equals the sum of forces acting on an object. Although it may seem intuitive to subtract the forces, the upward force must counteract both the weight and the deceleration of the individual. Understanding this balance clarifies why the two forces are added rather than subtracted.
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I was doing some momentum questions. There some that goes like "a man dives into water, and comes to a stop x seconds after reaching water, what force did the water act on him" or "stuntman jumps onto a mattress, matress compressed down x meters before he is brought to rest, what force did the matress apply on him?"
Basically, answer= (guys mass)(acc. of medium) + 9.8(guys mass)

Everytime I do those questions, I keep forgetting account for gravity, and I don't know why you are suppose to add 9.8*(guys mass). I mean, isn't gravity pulling the guy down, while the water/mattress's force is pushing the guy upwards, to stop him? So why do you add the 2 forces, if anything, wouldn't you subtract? (someone please clear this up for me :confused: )
 
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Sorry for the late reply. In case you're still interested, here are my comments on this.

404 said:
I was doing some momentum questions. There some that goes like "a man dives into water, and comes to a stop x seconds after reaching water, what force did the water act on him" or "stuntman jumps onto a mattress, matress compressed down x meters before he is brought to rest, what force did the matress apply on him?"

Basically, answer= (guys mass)(acc. of medium) + 9.8(guys mass)

The matress supplies an upward force that has to do 2 things:

1.) Decelerate the man.
2.) Support his weight.

So if we apply Newton's second law to the man + mattress system we have:

\Sigma F=F_{mattress}-mg=ma

So you are subtracting the two forces. And as you can see, upon solving for F{mattress} you get mg+ma.
 
here's another way of looking at it...

downward force= (mg+ma)...this is applied onto the surface by the guy

for every force applied to the surface(mattress/water)...there will be an equal and opposite reaction by the surface in the upward direction...
 
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