CONCURRENT
FORCES in equilibrium
Newton’s
law: F = m a
Forces cause motion. But if the forces balance each other out, the body acted upon by the forces is in equilibrium.
The
net force is zero. The object is therefore at rest or moving at a constant
velocity.
(same
direction and same speed at any time). That is the acceleration is zero.
The study of body in
equilibrium is called statics.
A load supported by a crane (see image) is in equilibrium between its weight and the tension in the cable.
![]() 2 forces act on the load: the tension in the string pulling up and the weight pulling down |
![]() free-body diagram |
To
simplify the work of a physicist or engineer, a
“free-body diagram” of the body (load
here) is drawn. This is a sketch in which we draw only the object in
equilibrium (some time as a point) and the forces that act on it.
EXERCICES:
Try not to
look at the hints. Follow the steps:
The origin is at the center of mass of the object studied. In the above
example, the origin is the load.
1)Can you
draw a body-diagram for each of the situations. The diagram must show
all the forces acting on the object. The forces will include :
W (weight pulling down), N (normal force exerted by the
surface on the object. Usually same size as W but opposite direction), P (pulling force or engine
force, moves the object forward), T (recoil force in a
spring/string, opposes the stretching of the spring/string, same size
as the weight/stress but opposite direction).
A) A book standing on a table.
Hint: forces are: Normal (up) and weight (down)
B) A car moving at a
constant speed in a straight line.
Hint: forces are engine
(right), friction (left) , weight (down), normal (up)
C) A sled pulled by a child
at a constant speed along a flat surface.
The rope makes a 30 degrees angle with the horizontal.
Hint: forces are pulling
force at an angle of 30 with horizontal, friction (left), weigh
t(down), normal (up)
E) A load on a vertical
spring.
Hint: tension (recoil force
up), weight (down)
F) A boat at rest.
Hint: forces are weight
(down), normal (Archimedes force, up)
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G) a sign hanged by 2 ropes: Hint: tension along each rope, weight
|
|
| H
) A skier moving down hill Hint: weight, normal perpendicular to surface along the skier body, friction along surface but opposes motion |
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EQUILIBRIUM IN
ONE DIMENSION
We
have F+ = F-
F+ = sum of all the forces acting
in one direction (called the positive direction)
F- = sum of all the forces acting in the opposite direction (called the
negative direction).
A) Four persons are having a
tug-of-war with a rope. Harry and Mary are on the left; Bill and Jill
are on the right. Mary pulls with a force of 105 lb, Harry pulls with a
force of 255lb, and Jill pulls with a force of 165 lb. With what force
must Bill pull to produce equilibrium ? Sketch a free-body diagram.
B)
Find the force F that will produce equilibrium in
each free-body diagram.
![]() |
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3) A front-wheel drive car is
traveling at CONSTANT VELOCITY. (forces balance each others). The
forces acting on the car are shown in the diagram above. Q is the force of the air on the
moving car. P is the total upward force on both
front wheels. A) Find the magnitude of vector P i) Calculate the resultant force
driving the car forward. |
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EQUILIBRIUM IN
TWO DIMENSIONS
For
forces A, B and C with x-components Ax, Bx, Cx respectively, and with
y-components Ay, By, and Cy, respectively, to be in equilibrium:
The
sum of x-components = 0 ; that is Ax+Bx+Cx = 0 and
The sum of the y-components =0; that is Ay+By+Cy=0
In
general, to solve equilibrium problems:
1–
Draw a free-body diagram from the point at which the unknown forces act
2–
Find the x-component and y-component of each force.
3.
Substitute the components in the equation:
Sum of x-components = 0
Sum of y-components = 0
4–
Solve of the unknowns
| 4)
Find the
forces F1 and F2 necessary
to produce equilibrium in the free body-diagram shown: Hints: (try
without) A)First Find the x-component
of each force: |
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4) You are
pulling a brick (10kg) with a spring scale. The spring is moving at a
constant speed.
The spring scales reads 4N. Try without hints.
A) Sketch a
free-body diagram.
hint:
the pulling force is 4N and points to the right. The frictional force
points to the left.
The weight points down and the normal force points up. All
the forces meet at the origin (the mass of the brick).
B)
find the force of friction.
Hint:
sum of the x-components is 0. Tx + Fx = 0. T is the pulling force and F
is the friction. Fx <0
C)
find the elastic recoil of the tabletop (that is the normal force)
Hint:
sum of the y-components is zero. N + W = 0 . N is the normal force and
W is the weight. W <0.
5)
|
5) You are
pulling a block with a cord. Constant speed. |
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6) An object in equilibrium has three
forces exerted on it. A 33N force acts at 90 degrees from the
x-axis
(F1 = 33N @ 90) and a 44N force acts
at 60 degrees (F2 = 44N@
60).
What are the magnitude and direction of the third force F3 . Try
without hint.
Hint:
B) Find the x-component and the
y-component of F1 and F2.
F1x = 0 , F1y = F1 , F2x = _________(use cosine)
F2y = ____________ (use sine)
C) write the 2 equations for equilibrium:
F1x + F2x + F3x = 0
F1y + F2y + F3y = 0
Solve for F3x and F3Y
D) once you have F3x and F3Y it is easy to find the magnitude of F3 (Pythagorean) . Trace F3x
then F3y then connect the tail of F3x to the head of F3y to find F3. Use Pythagorean theorem to
find the magnitude. (F3x2 +F3y2 = F32).
Use tangent to find the direction.
F3 = ___N@ _______
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7) A street
lamp weighs 150N. It is supported by 2 wires that form an angle of 120
degrees with each other. The tensions in the wires are equal . A) what is
the tension in each wire ? |
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|
8) A block
is at rest on an inclined plane. |
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LAB: frictional force and coefficient of friction (use firefox)
9) extra
for Physics major:
A 215N box
is placed on an inclined plane that
makes a 35 angle with the horizontal. Find the component
of the weight force parallel to the plane’s surface.
10)
extra for Physics major:
You pull
your 18kg suitcase at constant speed on a horizontal by exerting a 43N
force on the handle, which makes an angle alpha with the horizontal.
The force of friction on the suitcase is 27N.
A) What angle
does the handle make with the horizontal
B) What is the
normal force on the suitcase
C) What is the
coefficient of friction µs ?
friction
= coefficient multiplied
by the normal or f = µs
N
11) extra
for Physics major:
You push a
325N truck up a 20 degrees inclined plane at a constant velocity by
exerting a 211N force parallel to the plane’s surface.
A) what is the
component of the trunk’s weight parallel to the plane ?
B) What is the
sum of all forces parallel to the plane’s surface ?
C) What are
the magnitude and direction of the friction force ?
D) What is the
coefficient of friction ? (f = µs
N)
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