If a 11kg object moving at 15ms1 slows down to a halt after moving 225m, what is the coefficient of kinetic friction of the surface that the object was moving over?

1 Answer
Jan 19, 2016

The coefficient of friction is related to the force acting on the object to accelerate (decelerate) it and the normal force: μ=FFN=5.5107.8=0.05.

Explanation:

First we need to calculate the acceleration (deceleration) of the object:

v2=u2+2ad

02=1522a225

a=0.5ms2

Now we have an acceleration and a mass and want to find a force... hmm, that sounds a lot like Newton's Second Law to me!

F=ma=110.5=5.5N

This is the actual magnitude of the frictional force. The coefficient of friction is defined as:

μ=FFN where μ is the coefficient and FN is the normal force acting. In this case that is the weight force of the object, given by FN=mg=119.8=107.8N

Then μ=FFN=5.5107.8=0.05

Note that a frictional coefficient is a 'dimensionless' number which does not have units (because it is calculated as a force in N divided by another force in N, so the units cancel).