An object with a mass of 7 kg7kg is on a surface with a kinetic friction coefficient of 8 8. How much force is necessary to accelerate the object horizontally at 21 m/s^221ms2?
1 Answer
Explanation:
Newton's second law of motion states that the sum of the forces acting on an object is equal to its mass multiplied by its acceleration.
Mathematically speaking,
color(blue)(|bar(ul(color(white)(a/a)F_"net"=macolor(white)(a/a)|))) where:
F_"net"= net force
m= mass(kg)
a= acceleration(m/s^2)
In your case, we will start off by letting the up and forward directions be positive.
Step 1
List out all the forces acting on the object.
F_N+F_g+F_(app)+F_f=ma
Since the object is not changing in the
color(red)cancelcolor(black)(F_N)+color(red)cancelcolor(black)(F_g)+F_(app)+F_f=ma
So we are left with,
F_(app)+F_f=ma
Step 2
Since you are looking for the force necessary to accelerate the object, isolate for
F_(app)=ma-F_f
Step 3
In the equation,
F_(app)=ma-mu_kF_N
Note: Since the object is not changing vertically,
F_(app)=ma-mu_kmg
Factoring out
F_(app)=m(a-mu_kg)
Step 4
Plug in your known values.
F_(app)=(7kg)[21m/s^2-(8)(-9.81m/s^2)]
Solve.
F_(app)=696.36N
Rounding off the answer to one significant figure,
F_(app)~~color(green)(|bar(ul(color(white)(a/a)color(black)(700N)color(white)(a/a)|)))