Celestiela said:
A man sits in a bosun's chair that dangles from a massless rope, which runs over a massless, frictionless pulley attached to the ceiling and back down to the man's hand. The combined mass of the man and chair is 90.0 kg.
Ok, I found a solution that had T=Mchair*a + Fnormal + Mchair*g. How did they know to separate the man and the chair when the problem only gives you a mass for the combined mass of the man and the chair?
Then the problem asks for the weight exerted by the ceiling onto the whole system. Why is this answer not just all of the weights added together?
What is the question? Your solution seems to still contain unknowns. If the question is only about the tension in the rope, there is no need to separate the man and the chair, and no need to worry about the normal force. Without knowing the breakdown of the mass into mass of chair and mass of man, you cannot find the normal force.
If you just look at the man/chair group of mass M, the forces acting on M are gravity, Mg, and twice the tension in the rope, 2T. If the mass is acceleratiing downward, it is because the tension is less than half the weight, Mg. If the man is pulling himself upward at constant speed, there is no acceleration and the tension is half the weight. If the man is accelerating upward, the tension would have to be more than half the weight.
The force provided by the ceiling is twice the tension in the rope (massless rope and pulley). If the man is moving at constant speed, that force is just the sum of the weight of the man and the chair, but if they are accelerating, it has to be less for downward acceleration and greater for upward acceleration. In the limiting case, if the man let go of the rope the acceleration would be -g (downward), the tension would be zero, and the ceiling would provide no force.
The man and the chair share a common acceleration. If you knew ther separate masses you could write two equations
F_{man} = T + N - M_{man}g = M_{man}a
F_{chair} = T - N - M_{chair}g = M_{chair}a
without knowing the separate masses, the best you can do is add the two equations to get
F_{total} = 2T - M_{total}g = M_{total}a