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Forces at An Angle

This document discusses resolving forces into perpendicular components and applying Newton's Second Law in each direction. It provides two worked examples of resolving forces that act at angles on objects with mass to calculate acceleration. In the first example, the tension in arms dragging a computer base unit is resolved to find the acceleration of 6.0 m/s^2 and normal reaction of 42 N. In the second example, the forces of two tugboats towing a large boat are resolved to find an acceleration of 0.95 m/s^2. Exercises provide additional problems applying these concepts.

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Vivek Patel
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
262 views

Forces at An Angle

This document discusses resolving forces into perpendicular components and applying Newton's Second Law in each direction. It provides two worked examples of resolving forces that act at angles on objects with mass to calculate acceleration. In the first example, the tension in arms dragging a computer base unit is resolved to find the acceleration of 6.0 m/s^2 and normal reaction of 42 N. In the second example, the forces of two tugboats towing a large boat are resolved to find an acceleration of 0.95 m/s^2. Exercises provide additional problems applying these concepts.

Uploaded by

Vivek Patel
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Mechanics 2.6.

Forces acting at an angle: Resolving Forces


mc-web-mech2-6-2009 A force that acts at an angle can be split into two perpendicular components.

F F sin

F cos
Newtons Second Law can be applied in each of the resolved directions.

Worked Example 1. A computer base unit of mass 6 kg is dragged along a smooth desk. If the tension in each arm of the person dragging it is 20 N and it acts at 25 above the horizontal, what is the acceleration of the base unit and what is its normal reaction? Solution Figure 1 shows the forces acting on the base unit. Firstly the acceleration, a, needs to be calculated. The resultant horizontal force is 40 cos 25 . Using Newtons Second Law of Motion: F = ma 40 cos 25 = 6 a a = 6.0 m s2 (2 s.f.) In order to calculate the normal reaction force, resolve vertically: R + 40 sin 25 6 9.81 = 0 R = 58.56 16.90 = 42 N (2 s.f.) Worked Example 2. Two tug boats are towing a large boat, of mass 13750 kg, back to shore. Tug boat 1 is pulling with a force of T1 = 7500 N at an angle of 30 north of the forward motion (see Figure 2) and tug boat 2 is pulling with a force of T2 = 8500 N at an angle south of the forward motion. If there is a resistive motion of 1050 N opposing the eastern motion, what is the acceleration of the large boat?

R
o

2T = 40
25

6g
Figure 1

www.mathcentre.ac.uk

1
Written by T. Graham, M.C. Harrison, S. Lee, C.L.Robinson

c mathcentre 2009

Solution Firstly, calculate the unknown angle . Resolving perpendicular to the direction of motion gives: T1 sin 30 T2 sin = 0 1 ) 7500( 2 = sin 8500 = 26 (2 s.f.)
7500 N 1050 N Direction of Motion 13750 kg 30
o

8500 N

Figure 2 (View from above)

In order to calculate the acceleration, resolve in the direction of motion, which gives the resultant force as 7500 cos 30 + 8500 cos 26 1050. Applying Newtons Second Law gives: 7500 cos 30 + 8500 cos 26 1050 = 13750a a = 0.95 m s2 (2 s.f.) Exercises 1. A computer base unit of mass 4.5 kg is dragged along a smooth desk. If the tension in each arm of the person dragging it is 16 N and acts at 22 above the horizontal, then what is the normal reaction force? 2. A computer base unit of mass 7.5 kg is dragged along a smooth desk. If the normal contact force is 23 N and the tension in the arm of the person dragging it acts at 23 to the horizontal, then what is the total tension in the persons arms? 3. Two tug boats are towing a large boat, of mass 22500 kg, back to shore. Tug boat 1 is pulling with a force of 5500 N at an angle of 35 north of the forward motion (similar to Worked Example 2) and tug boat 2 is pulling with a force of 4907.8 N at an angle 40 south of the forward motion. If the large boat is being pulled with constant velocity, and there is a resistive force to the motion, then what size is the resistive force? 4. Two tug boats are towing a large boat, of mass M kg, back to shore. Tug boat 1 is pulling with a force of T1 N at an angle of 25 north of the forward motion (like in Worked Example 2) and tug boat 2 is pulling with a force of T2 N at an angle of 25 south of the forward motion. If the large boat is being pulled with constant velocity, and there is a resistive force of 4000 N to the motion, then what are the magnitudes of the two forces T1 and T2 ? 5. A child on a sledge is being pulled along a horizontal path by its parent. The child and sledge have a combined mass of 20 kg and there is a normal contact force of 124.5 N. Given there is no resistance to motion and the parent pulls with a force of 125 N at an angle to the horizontal, then what is the angle ? 6. A child on a sledge is being pulled along a horizontal path by its parent. The child and sledge have a combined mass of 18 kg and there is a normal contact force of 135 N. Given there is no resistance to motion and the parent pulls with a force of F N at an angle 25 to the horizontal, then what is F ? Answers (all to 2 s.f.) 1. 32 N 2. 130 N 3. 8300 N 4. F1 = F2 = 2200 N 5. 35 www.mathcentre.ac.uk 2
Written by T. Graham, M.C. Harrison, S. Lee, C.L.Robinson

6. 98 N c mathcentre 2009

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