A student pushes a 25 kg crate which is initially at rest with a force of 160 N over a distance of 15 m. If there is 75 N of friction, what is the final speed of the crate?
∆E_k = F_"net"∆d
v = sqrt((2F_"net"∆d)/m)
(How do I find Fnet?)
(How do I find Fnet?)
1 Answer
Explanation:
Ok, so you know that the work done by a net force that acts on an object is equal to the change in that object's kinetic energy.
color(blue)(ul(color(black)(W = DeltaK_E)))
If we take
W = F * d * cosalpha
In your case, the force acts in the direction of the displacement, so
alpha = 0^@ implies cos alpha = 1
Similarly, if we take
DeltaK_e = 1/2 m * v_f^2 - 1/2 * m * v_i^2
In your case,
DeltaK_E = 1/2 * m * v_f^2
This means that you have
F_"net" * d = 1/2 * m * v_f^2
which, as you know, gets you
v_f = sqrt( (2 * F_"net" * d)/m)" " " "color(orange)("(*)")
Now, the net force is simply the sum of all forces that act on the object, with the added mention that it is the vector sum, i.e. that it takes into account the magnitudes and the directions of the forces.
In your case, you know that the force
This means that the net force will be
F_"net" = F - F_"friction"
F_"net" = "160 N" - "75 N" = "85 N"
Keep in mind that the net force acts in the same direction as
This means that you have
v_f = sqrt( (2 * 85 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("kg"))) "m s"^(-2) * "15 m")/(25color(red)(cancel(color(black)("kg"))))) = color(darkgreen)(ul(color(black)("10. m s"^(-1))))
The answer is rounded to two sig figs.