- Sep 10, 2004
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Problem:
- A person wants to know the static friction and kinetic friction of a box on a plank
- He lifts one side of the plank until @ 30 degrees, it begins to slip and slides down the 2.5m plank in 4 seconds
- What is the kinetic (Mk) and static friction (Ms)??
Thanks
Edit: Solved, thanks to DrPizza.
- A person wants to know the static friction and kinetic friction of a box on a plank
- He lifts one side of the plank until @ 30 degrees, it begins to slip and slides down the 2.5m plank in 4 seconds
- What is the kinetic (Mk) and static friction (Ms)??
So I've been trying to find the kinetic friction...
if Fk = Mk * Fn, then
ma = Mk * mgsin(theta), then
a = Mk * gsin(theta)
Plugging it into the equation x = xo + vot + 1/2at^2, it becomes
2.5 = 0.5(Mk * 9.81 * sin 30 ) * 4^2, which becomes
0.3125 = Mk * 9.81 * sin 30, thus
Mk = 0.0637
The question is... is that the right answer? If you look at the Ms, it is much much higher, in whcih I'm not sure if Mk should be this low.
theta = 30 degrees.
When solving for static friction, I get
X-coords = Ff + F = 0, in which F = mgsin(theta)
Y-coords = Fn - mgcos(theta) [weight]
So therefore
Fn = mgcos(theta)
So plugging it back in,
Ff = MsFn ---> Ms = mgsin(theta)/mgcos(theta) --> tan(theta) = 0.58 = Ms
My question for this one is, if 30 degrees was the point where the box began to slip, does that mean that the static point was < 30 degrees, and therefore I have to calculate at a lower theta?
Thanks
Edit: Solved, thanks to DrPizza.
