conquest said:the corner with an angle of theta is the one with an arm to the center and an arm to the F parallel axis and sine theta is equal to the opposite side divided by the hypotenuse. So indeed sin theta = F parallel / mg so F parallel = mgSin(theta) is correct.
As conquest has explained, you're imagining the wrong triangle. If you want to find the components of a vector using a right triangle, then that full vector must be the hypotenuse of that triangle. The other sides are the components. (The components are always smaller than the original vector.)Vantenkeist said:I agree, sin theta is equal to opposite divided by hypotenuse. But opposite of theta in the picture is mg, and the hypotenuse is F parallel. So that gives us Sin theta = mg/F parallel. Which makes F parallel equal to mg/sin theta...do you see the dilemma?
Doc Al said:As conquest has explained, you're imagining the wrong triangle. If you want to find the components of a vector using a right triangle, then that full vector must be the hypotenuse of that triangle. The other sides are the components. (The components are always smaller than the original vector.)
Since you want the components of the weight, then it's the weight that must be the hypotenuse of your right triangle.
You can certainly construct a triangle, as you did, where the weight (mg) is one of the sides. But the hypotenuse will not be the component of the weight parallel to the incline. (That triangle has no physical meaning and its hypotenuse is mislabeled.)Vantenkeist said:Thank you I will look into this a little more. As I understand geometry, as long as you can validly construct the triangle, it cannot be a 'wrong' triangle. Any and all triangles that I could construct validly using the information given should lead to the same result. I know there's an error here - I just have to find it.
Doc Al said:You can certainly construct a triangle, as you did, where the weight (mg) is one of the sides. But the hypotenuse will not be the component of the weight parallel to the incline. (That triangle has no physical meaning and its hypotenuse is mislabeled.)
The problem is not with the geometry of triangles, but with using a right triangle to represent a physical situation.
Another hint: The component vectors must be perpendicular to each other.