Mechanics Problems - Force Problems

Linear Acceleration, No Force Components

Note: Each problem begins with a list of forces necessary to solve the context-rich problem. These are for the benefit of the instructor. Delete the list before using the problems in your class.

  1. Tension, WeightSOLUTION :FOR THE FOLLOWING PLAN THE PROBLEM. An artist friend of yours wants your opinion of his idea for a new kinetic sculpture. The basic concept is to balance a heavy object with two lighter objects using two very light pulleys, which are essentially frictionless, and lots of string. The sculpture has one pulley hanging from the ceiling by a string attached to its center. Another string passes over this pulley. One end of this string is attached to a 25 lb object while the other supports another pulley at its center. This second pulley also has a string passing over it with one end attached to a 10 lb object and the other to a 15 lb object. Your friend hasn't quite figured out the rest of the sculpture but wants to know if, ignoring the mass of the pulley and string, the 25 lb object will remain stationary during the time that the 10 and 15 lb objects are accelerating. DO NOT SOLVE THE PROBLEM.

  2. Weight, Normal: You have always been impressed by the speed of the elevators in the IDS building in Minneapolis (especially compared to the one in the Physics building). You wonder about the maximum acceleration for these elevators during normal operation, so you decide to measure it by using your bathroom scale. While the elevator is at rest on the ground floor, you get in, put down your scale, and stand on it. The scale reads 130 lbs. You continue standing on the scale when the elevator goes up, carefully watching the reading. During the trip to the 50th floor, the greatest scale reading was 180 lbs.

  3. You are designing a lamp for the interior of a special executive express elevator in a new office building. The lamp has two sections that hang one directly below the other. The bottom section is attached to the top one by a single thin wire and the upper section is attached to the ceiling by another single thin wire. Because the idea is to make each section appear to be floating without support, you want to use the thinnest (and thus weakest) wire possible. You decide to calculate the force each wire must exert on the lamp sections in case of an emergency stop. The elevator has all the latest safety features and will stop with an acceleration of g/3 in any emergency. Each section of the lamp weighs 7.0 N.

  4. You are investigating an elevator accident which happened in a tall building. An elevator in this building is attached to a strong cable which runs over a pulley attached to a steel support in the roof. The other end of the cable is attached to a block of metal called a counterweight which hangs freely. An electric motor on the side of the elevator drives the elevator up or down by exerting a force on the side of the elevator shaft. You suspect that when the elevator was fully loaded, there was too large a force on the motor . A fully loaded elevator at maximum capacity weighs 2400 lbs. The counterweight weighs 1000 lbs. The elevator always starts from rest at its maximum acceleration of g/4 whether it is going up or down. (a) What force does the wall of the elevator shaft exert on the motor if the elevator starts from rest and goes up? (b) What force does the wall of the elevator shaft exert on the motor if the elevator starts from rest and goes down?

  5. Tension, Weight: An artist friend of yours wants your opinion of his idea for a new kinetic sculpture. The basic concept is to balance a heavy object with two lighter objects using two very light pulleys, which are essentially frictionless, and lots of string. The sculpture has one pulley hanging from the ceiling by a string attached to its center. Another string passes over this pulley. One end of this string is attached to a 25-lb object while the other supports another pulley at its center. This second pulley also has a string passing over it with one end attached to a 10-lb object and the other to a 15-lb object. Your friend hasn't quite figured out the rest of the sculpture but wants to know if, ignoring the mass of the pulley and string, the 25-lb object will remain stationary during the time that the 10-lb and 15-lb objects are accelerating. DO ONLY THE PROBLEM SOLVING STEPS NECESSARY TO FOCUS THE PROBLEM, DESCRIBE THE PHYSICS OF THE PROBLEM, AND PLAN A SOLUTION. DO NOT SOLVE THIS PROBLEM.

  6. Weight, Normal, Friction: Because of your physics background, you have been asked to check the feasibility of a action movie stunt. In the script, the hero and villain are fighting on top of a locomotive heading down a straight track at 25 mph. Having jumped on the train as it passed over a lake, the hero is dressed in a rubber wet suit. During the fight, the hero slips off and barely hangs on over the top edge of the front of the locomotive, which is essentially a vertical smooth steel face. The villain stomps on the hero's fingers to cause the hero to let go and be crushed under the train. Meanwhile, the hero's partner has been trying to stop the train, whose brakes have been locked by the villain. Seeing the hero’s fingers give way, the partner immediately opens the throttle, causing the train to accelerate forward and the hero to stay on the front face of the locomotive without slipping down until the brakes can be unlocked. The movie company wants to know what minimum acceleration is necessary to perform this stunt. The hero weighs 180 lbs. and the locomotive weighs 100 tons. Looking in a book giving the properties of materials, you find that for rubber on steel, the coefficient of kinetic friction is 0.50 and the coefficient of static friction is 0.60.

  7. Weight, Normal, Friction: While working in a mechanical structures laboratory, your boss assigns you to test the strength of ropes under different conditions. Your test set-up consists of two ropes attached to a 30 kg block which slides on a 5.0 m long horizontal table top. Two low friction, light weight pulleys are mounted at opposite ends of the table. One rope is attached to each end of the 30 kg block. Each of these ropes runs horizontally over a different pulley. The other end of one of the ropes is attached to a 12 kg block which hangs straight down. The other end of the second rope is attached to a 20 kg block also hanging straight down. The coefficient of kinetic friction between the block on the table and the table's surface is 0.08. The 30 kg block is initially held in place by a mechanism that is released when the test begins so, that the block is accelerating during the test. During this test, what is the force exerted on the rope supporting the 12 kg block?

 

Linear Acceleration, Force Components

Note: Each problem begins with a list of forces necessary to solve the context-rich problem. These are for the benefit of the instructor. Delete the list before using the problems in your class.

  1. Human, Weight, Normal: You are taking care of two small children, Sarah and Rachel, who are twins. On a nice cold, clear day you decide to take them ice skating on Lake of the Isles. To travel across the frozen lake you have Sarah hold your hand and Rachel's hand. The three of you form a straight line as you skate, and the two children just glide. Sarah must reach up at an angle of 60 degrees to grasp your hand, but she grabs Rachel's hand horizontally. Since the children are twins, they are the same height and the same weight, 50 lbs. To get started you accelerate at 2.0 m/s2. You are concerned about the force on the children's arms which might cause shoulder damage. So you calculate the force Sarah exerts on Rachel's arm, and the force you exert on Sarah's other arm. You assume that the frictional forces of the ice surface on the skates are negligible.

  2. Tension, Weight, Normal, and Friction: You are planning to build a log cabin and will need to pull the logs up a hill to the building site by means of a rope attached to a winch. In order to buy the rope, you need to know how strong the rope must be and decide to do a quick calculation for this. The logs weigh 500 lbs. at most and the hill is at an angle of 30° with respect to the horizontal. You estimate that the coefficient of kinetic friction between a log and the hill is 0.90. When pulling a log up the hill, you will make sure that the rope stays parallel to the surface of the hill and the acceleration of the log is never more than 0.80 m/s^2.

  3. Tension, Weight, Normal, Friction: At your job at a warehouse, you have designed a method to help get heavy packages up a 15º ramp. The package is attached to a rope that runs parallel to the ramp and passes over a pulley at the top of the ramp. The other end of the rope is attached to a counterweight that hangs straight down. The mass of the counterweight is always adjusted to be twice the mass of the package. However, your boss is worried that the acceleration of the package will make it too difficult to handle at the top of the ramp and tells you to calculate it. To determine the influence of friction on the package by the ramp, you run some tests and find that using a horizontal force of 250 Newtons, you can push a 50 kg package at a constant speed along a level floor made of the same material as the ramp.

  4. Tension, Weight, Normal, Friction: After graduating you get a job in Northern California. To move there, you rent a truck for all of your possessions. You also decide to take your car with you by towing it behind the truck. The instructions you get with the truck tells you that the maximum truck weight when fully loaded is 20,000 lbs and that the towing hitch that you rented has a maximum strength of 1000 lbs. Just before you leave, you weigh the fully loaded truck and find it to be 15,000 lbs. At the same time you weigh your car and find it to weigh 3000 lbs. You begin to worry if the hitch is strong enough. Then you remember that you can push your car and can easily keep it moving at a constant velocity. You know that air resistance will increase as the car goes faster but from your experience you estimate that the sum of the forces due to air resistance and friction on the car is not more than 300 lbs. If the largest hill you have to go up is sloped at 10o from the horizontal, what is the maximum acceleration you can safely have on that hill? DO ONLY THE PROBLEM SOLVING STEPS NECESSARY TO FOCUS THE PROBLEM, DESCRIBE THE PHYSICS OF THE PROBLEM, AND PLAN A SOLUTION. DO NOT SOLVE THIS PROBLEM.

  5. Weight, Normal, Friction: Because of your physics background, you have been able to get a job with a company devising stunts for an upcoming adventure movie being shot in Minnesota. In the script, the hero has been fighting the villain on the top of the locomotive of a train going down a straight horizontal track at 20 mph. He has just snuck on the train as it passed over a lake so he is wearing his rubber wet suit. During the fight, the hero slips and hangs by his fingers on the top edge of the front of the locomotive. The locomotive has a smooth steel front face sloped at 20o from the vertical so that the bottom of the front is more forward that the top. Now the villain stomps on the hero's fingers so he will be forced to let go and slip down the front of the locomotive and be crushed under its wheels. Meanwhile, the hero's partner is at the controls of the locomotive trying to stop the train. To add to the suspense, the brakes have been locked by the villain. It will take her 10 seconds to open the lock. To her horror, she sees the hero's fingers give way before she can get the lock off. Since she is the brains of the outfit, she immediately opens the throttle causing the train to accelerate forward. This causes the hero to stay on the front face of the locomotive without slipping down giving her time to save the hero's life. The movie company wants to know what minimum acceleration is necessary to perform this stunt. The hero weighs 180 lbs in his wet suit. The locomotive weighs 100 tons. You look in a book giving the properties of materials and find that the coefficient of kinetic friction for rubber on steel is 0.50 and its coefficient of static friction is 0.60.

  6. Gravitational: You have been hired as a consultant for the new Star Trek TV series to make sure that any science on the show is correct. In this episode, the crew of the Enterprise discovers an abandoned space station in deep space far from any stars. This station is obviously the work of an advanced race and consists of four identical 3 x 1020 kg asteroids configured so that each is at the corner of a square with 200 km sides. According to the tricorder, the station has been abandoned for at least two centuries. You know that such a configuration is unstable and worry whether there would be observable motion of the asteroids after two hundred years so you calculate the acceleration of one of the asteroids in the proposed configuration. Make sure you give both the magnitude and the direction of the acceleration.

  7. Gravitational: Because the movie industry is trying to make the technical details of movies as correct as possible, you have been made a member of a panel reviewing the details of a new science fiction script. Although neither astronomy nor navigation is your field, you are disturbed by one scene in which a space ship which is low on fuel is attempting to land on the Earth. As the ship approaches, it is heading straight for the center of the Earth. The commander cuts off the ship's engines so that it will be pulled in by the Earth's gravitational force. As the commander looks in the viewer, she sees the Earth straight ahead and the Moon off to the left at an angle of 30o. The line between the centers of the Moon and Earth is at right angles to the initial path of the space ship. Under these conditions you don't think the ship will continue heading toward the Earth, so you calculate the component of its acceleration which is perpendicular to the initial path of the ship. First you look up the distance between the Earth and the Moon (3.8 x 105 km), the mass of the Earth (6.0 x 1024 kg), the mass of the Moon (7.3 x 1022 kg), the radius of the Earth (6.4 x 103 km), the radius of the Moon (1.7 x 103 km), and the universal gravitational constant (6.7 x 10-11 N m2/kg2). As a first approximation, you decide to neglect the effect of the Sun and the other planets in the solar system. You guess that a space ship such as described in the script might have a mass of about 100,000 kg.

 

No Acceleration (a = 0), No Force Components

Note: Each problem begins with a list of forces necessary to solve the context-rich problem. These are for the benefit of the instructor. Delete the list before using the problems in your class.

  1. Weight - Buoyancy, Normal, Friction, Electric: The quarter is almost over so you decide to have a party. To add atmosphere to your otherwise drab apartment, you decide to decorate with balloons. You buy about fifty and blow them up so that they are all sitting on your carpet. After putting most of them up, you decide to play with the few balloons left on the floor. You rub one on your sweater and find that it will "stick" to a wall. Ah ha, you know immediately that you are observing the electric force in action. Since it will be some time before you guests arrive and you have already made the onion dip, you decide to calculate the minimum electric force of the wall on the balloon. You know that the air exerts a net upward force (the "buoyant" force) on the balloon which makes it almost float. You measure that the weight of the balloon minus the buoyant force of the air on the balloon is 0.05 lb. By reading your physics book, you estimate that the coefficient of static friction between the wall and the balloon (rubber and concrete) is 0.80.

  2. Tension, Weight, Electric: While working in a University research laboratory you are given the job of testing a new device for precisely measuring the weight of small objects. The device consists of two very light strings attached at one end to a support. An object is attached to the other end of each string. The strings are far enough apart so that objects hanging on them don't touch. One of the objects has a very accurately known weight while the other object is the unknown. A power supply is slowly turned on to give each object an electric charge which causes the objects to slowly move away from each other (repel) because of the electric force. When the power supply is kept at its operating value, the objects come to rest at the same horizontal level. At that point, each of the strings supporting them makes a different angle with the vertical and that angle is measured. To test the device, you want to calculate the weight of an unknown sphere from the measured angles and the weight of a known sphere. You use a standard sphere with a known weight of 2.000 N supported by a string which makes an angle of 10.0º with the vertical. The unknown sphere's string makes an angle of 20.0º with the vertical.

  3. Gravitational: You are writing a short science fiction story for your English class. You get your idea from the fact that when people cross the Earth's equator for the first time, they are awarded a certificate to commemorate the experience. In your story it is the 21st Century and you are the tour director for a trip to the moon. Transplanetary Tours promises tour participants a certificate to commemorate their passage from the stronger influence of the Earth's gravitational pull to the stronger gravitational pull of the moon. To finish the story, you need to figure out where on the trip you should award the certificate. In your physics book you look up the distance between the Earth and the Moon (3.8 x 105 km), the mass of the Earth (6.0 x 1024 kg), the mass of the Moon (7.3 x 1022 kg), the radius of the Earth (6.4 x 103 km), the radius of the Moon (1.7 x 103 km), and the universal gravitational constant (6.7 x 10-11 N m2/kg2).

  4. Gravitational: You have been hired as a consultant for the new Star Trek TV series to make sure that the science in the show is correct. In this episode, the crew of the Enterprise goes into standard orbit around a newly discovered planet. The plot requires that the planet is hollow and contains the underground cities of a lost civilization. From orbit the science officer determines that the radius of the planer is 1/4 (one-fourth) that of Earth. The first officer beams down to the surface of the planet and measures that his weight is only 1/2 (one-half) of his weight on Earth. How does the mass of this planet compare with the mass of the Earth? If it were hollow, its density would be less than Earth. Are the measurements consistent with a hollow planet?

  5. Gravitational, Electric: You and a friend are reading a newspaper article about nuclear fusion energy generation in stars. The article describes the helium nucleus, made up of two protons and two neutrons, as very stable so it doesn't decay. You immediately realize that you don't understand why the helium nucleus is stable. You know that the proton has the same charge as the electron except that the proton charge is positive. Neutrons you know are neutral. Why, you ask your friend, don't the protons simply repel each other causing the helium nucleus to fly apart? Your friend says she knows why the helium nucleus does not just fly apart. The gravitational force keeps it together, she says. Her model is that the two neutrons sit in the center of the nucleus and gravitationally attract the two protons. Since the protons have the same charge, they are always as far apart as possible on opposite sides of the neutrons. What mass would the neutron have if this model of the helium nucleus works? Is that a reasonable mass? Looking in your physics book, you find that the mass of a neutron is about the same as the mass of a proton and that the diameter of a helium nucleus is 3.0 x 10-13 cm.

 

No Acceleration (a = 0), Force Components

Note: Each problem begins with a list of forces necessary to solve the context-rich problem. These are for the benefit of the instructor. Delete the list before using the problems in your class.

  1. Tension, Weight, Friction: You are taking advantage of an early snow to go sledding. After a long afternoon of going up and down hills with your sled, you decide it is time to go home. You are thankful that you can pull your sled without climbing any more hills. As you are walking home, dragging the sled behind you by a rope fastened to the front of the sled, you wonder what the coefficient of friction of the snow on the sled is. You estimate that you are pulling on the rope with a 2 pound force, that the sled weighs 10 pounds, and that the rope makes an angle of 25 degrees to the level ground.

  2. Human, Weight, Normal, Friction: You are helping a friend move into a new apartment. A box weighing 150 lbs needs to be moved to make room for a couch.. You are taller than the box, so you reach down to push it at an angle of 50 degrees from the horizontal. The coefficient of static friction between the box and the floor is 0.50 and the coefficient of kinetic friction between the box and the floor is 0.30. (a) If you want to exert the minimum force necessary, how hard would you push to keep the box moving across the floor? (b) Suppose you bent your knees so that your push were horizontal. How hard would you push to keep the box moving across the floor?

  3. Human, Weight, Normal, Friction: You are helping an investigation of back injuries in the construction industry. Your assignment is to determine why there is a correlation of the height of the worker to the likelihood of back injury. You suspect that some back injuries are related to the way people push heavy objects in order to move them. When people push an object, such as a box, across the floor they tend to lean down and push at an angle to the horizontal. Taller people push at a larger angle with respect to the horizontal than shorter people. To present your ideas to the rest of the research team, you decide to calculate the force a 200-lb box exerts on a 150-lb person when they push it across a typical floor at a constant velocity of 7.0 ft/s as a function of the angle with respect to the horizontal at which the person pushes the box. Once you have your function, you will use angles of 0o, 10o, 20o, 30o, and 40o to make a graph of the result for the presentation. One of your coworkers tells you that a typical coefficient of static friction between a box and a floor of 0.60 and while a typical coefficient of kinetic friction between a box and a floor is 0.50. (Don't forget to make the graph).

  4. Tension, Weight: Your are part of a team to help design the atrium of a new building. Your boss, the manager of the project, wants to suspend a 20-lb sculpture high over the room by hanging it from the ceiling using thin, clear fishing line (string) so that it will be difficult to see how the sculpture is held up. The only place to fasten the fishing line is to a wooden beam which runs around the edge of the room at the ceiling. The fishing line that she wants to use will hold 20 lbs (20-lb test) so she suggests attaching two lines to the sculpture to be safe. Each line would come from the opposite side of the ceiling to attach to the hanging sculpture. Her initial design has one line making an angle of 20o with the ceiling and the other line making an angle of 40o with the ceiling. She knows you took physics, so she asks you if her design can work.

  5. Electric, Weight, Tension: While working in a University research laboratory you are given the job of testing a new device, called an electrostatic scale, for precisely measuring the weight of small objects. The device is quite simple. It consists of two very light but strong strings attached to a support so that they hang straight down. An object is attached to the other end of each string. One of the objects has a very accurately known weight while the other object is the unknown. A power supply is slowly turned on to give each object an electric charge which causes the objects to slowly move away from each other (repel) because of the electric force. When the power supply is kept at its operating value, the objects come to rest at the same horizontal level. At that point, each of the strings supporting them makes a different angle with the vertical and that angle is measured. To test the device, you want to calculate the weight of an unknown sphere from the measured angles and the weight of a known sphere. You use a standard sphere with a known weight of 2.00000 N supported by a string which makes an angle of 10.00o with the vertical. The unknown sphere's string makes an angle of 20.00o with the vertical.