Understanding the concept of tension

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The discussion centers on the concept of tension in a rope supporting a weight. When a 100N block is hung from a rope tied to a tree branch, the tension in the rope is 100N, as the tree branch exerts an equal and opposite force to support the block. Confusion arises from interpreting the forces acting on the system; while the block pulls down with 100N, the tension in the rope does not double because the forces are balanced. The tension is the force exerted by the rope to keep the block stationary, which is equal to the weight of the block. Overall, the key takeaway is that tension in a stationary rope equals the weight it supports, not the sum of opposing forces.
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Hi everyone..
I've run into a bit of a problem while studying the concept of tension.
If a block which had a weight of 100N was to be hung from a rope which in turn was tied to say, the branch of a tall tree what would the tension in the rope be? According to all the textbooks it should be 100 N. This is where I get confused.
According to Newtons third law if the block exerts a force of 100N downwards then the branch of the tree must exert a force of 100 N upwards. This would mean that the rope would be pulled upwards with 100 N as well as downwards with 100 N. In that case why isn't the tension 200 N?
thanks
 
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Tension (and compression), requires two forces acting in oppositie directions. A rope being pulled with 100N and not supported at the other end will just move in the direction of the force and the tension in the rope will be zero. If it is restricted from moving the tension in the rope increases as you increase the pulling force so pulling with 100N will produce a tension of 100N in the rope.

In your example, the tree is resisting the 100N force so that rope remains stationary.

Just like if I am standing on the Earth and the mass of my body under the acceleration due to gravity creates a downward force on the earth. The Earth applies an equal and opposite force (otherwise I'd start moving in the direction of my weight (sinking into the earth)), but my legs are not compressed by a force that is double my weight.
 
Thanks for your reply..
yes.. the tree applies a force of 100 N but the object is also pulling down with 100 N. Wouldn't that be considered as two opposite forces?
 
a tension is the force exerted by the rope on the tree: 100N
 
The way I think of it, there are 4 forces acting:

The weight of the block pulling down (100N)
The tension of the string acting on the block to stop it falling (100N)
The branch of the tree pulling up on the string to stop the rope falling (100N)
The tension of the string pulling down on the tree to stop it floating away (100N)

The tension in the string is pulling both ways, and it is only at either end of the string that they don't cancel each other out. (If you pinch the string in the middle while it is holding the block, you won't feel the string pull up or down, because there is no net force).

On second thoughts this post might confuse you even more. It has confused me a little :)
 
mahela007 said:
Thanks for your reply..
yes.. the tree applies a force of 100 N but the object is also pulling down with 100 N. Wouldn't that be considered as two opposite forces?
Yes...

Consider a 1N book sitting on a table: the book exerts a force of 1N on the table and the table exerts a force of 1N on the book. What is the total force between the book and table?

What you are missing here is that forces always come in pairs.
 
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The total force would be zero (right?). 1N downwards + 1N upwards
But that would mean that the tension of the rope is also zero. (100 N up and 100N down). ?
 
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