If an object with a mass of 10 kg is moving on a surface at 15 ms^-1 and slows to a halt after 4 s, what is the friction coefficient of the surface?

1 Answer
Jan 20, 2016

The acceleration of the object is 3.75 ms^-2, which means the frictional force acting is 37.5 N and the frictional coefficient is mu = 0.38.

Explanation:

First we calculate the acceleration of the object:

v=u+at

where v is final velocity (ms^-1), u is initial velocity 9ms^-1), a is the acceleration (ms^-2) and t is the time (s).

Rearranging:

a=(v-u)/t=(0-15)/4 = -3.75 ms^-2

The negative sign just shows that it is a deceleration, and we can ignore it for the rest of this calculation.

Now we find the force acting to slow the object, using Newton's Second Law :

F=ma=10*3.75=37.5 N

This is simply the frictional force acting. Frictional force is related to the normal force acting on the object, which in this case is the weight of the object, F_N=mg=10*9.8 = 98 N:

F_f = muF_N

Rearranging and substituting in the force:

mu = F_f/F_N = 37.5/98 = 0.38

Note that mu is a dimensionless number, that is, it doesn't have any units.