Calculating Acceleration with Multiple Forces Acting on an Object

In summary, The object experiences an acceleration of 1.1 m/s squared due to the forces acting on it.
  • #1
SDTK
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Homework Statement


Two forces act on a 55 kg object. One has a magnitude of 65 N directed 59 degrees clockwise from the pos. x axis. The other has magnitude 35 N at 32 o clockwise from the pos. y axis.What is the acceleration of the object?

The answer is given as 1.1 m/ s squared,
(I got a similar answer 1.0 m/s squared.) , but not confident that I approached the solution correctly.

Thanks in advance for any help :-)

2. Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution


-- Is the correct approach to find the sum of: all x components, and y components of the forces, (65N, 35N, and weight)?
 
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  • #2
I get 1.0577 m/s^2
 
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  • #3
ObjectivelyRational said:
I get 1.0577 m/s^2

Thank you! :-)
 
  • #4
ObjectivelyRational said:
I get 1.0577 m/s^2
I confirm that.
@SDTK, if that is not what you got, please post your detailed working. Most likely you rounded some intermediate answer, keeping insufficient precision.
 
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  • #5
haruspex said:
I confirm that.
@SDTK, if that is not what you got, please post your detailed working. Most likely you rounded some intermediate answer, keeping insufficient precision.

thank you
 
  • #6
I also looked at doing vector addition, but it doesn't give a right triangle.

upload_2016-11-4_20-39-37.png
 

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  • #7
SDTK said:
thank you
I also looked at vector addition, but I would not get a right triangle. I'm thinking that vector addition would not be appropriate--- Is that correct?

upload_2016-11-4_20-39-37-png.108478.png
 
  • #8
SDTK, you wrote:
ΣFx = sin(32)(35) + cos(59)(65) = max
620.19 = max

How did you get from the first line to the second line?

Edit: It looks like you may have multiplied those 2 terms, rather than add them.
 
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  • #9
The problem states that two forces act on the object. Gravity was not one of them.

Cartesian vector components add in quadrature: square root of the sum of the squares.
 
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  • #10
TomHart said:
SDTK, you wrote:
ΣFx = sin(32)(35) + cos(59)(65) = max
620.19 = max

How did you get from the first line to the second line?

Edit: It looks like you may have multiplied those 2 terms, rather than add them.

Not sure what I did, thank you! for pointing it out :-)
 
  • #11
gneill said:
The problem states that two forces act on the object. Gravity was not one of them.

Cartesian vector components add in quadrature: square root of the sum of the squares.

gneill
Thank you!
Is this what you are telling me? (work shown below)
(I'm concerned because I get 0.99 m/s^2, which is different from the answers of @haruspex 1.0577m/s^2, @ObjectivelyRational 1.0577m/s^2, and the answer given with the problem 1.1m/s^2.)
Thanks

upload_2016-11-5_18-30-46.png
 
  • #12
Find x component of the net force, then find it in Y direction. THESE are of course 90 degrees wrt each other. Calculate the magnitude of the total net force. then calculate a from F and m.
 
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  • #13
No. The given forces won't in general form a right angle triangle (and they don't in this case). You need to sum their components.

What I was getting at was, once you've summed the individual x and y components of the vectors to form the resultant vector's components, then the magnitude of that resultant is found by summing its x and y components. You still need to find the components of the resultant vector using the method that you used in post #6 (only forget the gravitational force since it plays no role here).
 
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  • #14
gneill said:
No. The given forces won't in general form a right angle triangle (and they don't in this case). You need to sum their components.

What I was getting at was, once you've summed the individual x and y components of the vectors to form the resultant vector's components, then the magnitude of that resultant is found by summing its x and y components. You still need to find the components of the resultant vector using the method that you used in post #6 (only forget the gravitational force since it plays no role here).
Isn't it more direct just to draw the vector triangle and apply the cosine rule?
 
  • #15
SDTK said:
gneill
Thank you!
Is this what you are telling me? (work shown below)
(I'm concerned because I get 0.99 m/s^2, which is different from the answers of @haruspex 1.0577m/s^2, @ObjectivelyRational 1.0577m/s^2, and the answer given with the problem 1.1m/s^2.)
Thanks

View attachment 108525
In the triangle of forces you drew, what is the angle between the 65N and the 35N? Just a bit of elementary geometry needed.
 
  • #16
haruspex said:
Isn't it more direct just to draw the vector triangle and apply the cosine rule?
Yes, if you have the angle between the forces. In general though I expect a student to be faced with summing multiple forces to find a resultant. Doing them one at a time via the cosine rule could be tedious.
 
  • #17
Thank you!
I found
f net x to be 67.92N sin(32)35N + cos(59)65N
f net y to be -26.03 N cos(32)35N - sin(59)65N

If I draw a vector, magnitude of 68N on the positive x axis, and a vector magnitude 26N on the negative y axis,... then draw a vector between the two that meets the segment representing the vector sum, is that a vector representing the total net force?

upload_2016-11-5_19-57-22.png


ObjectivelyRational said:
Find x component of the net force, then find it in Y direction. THESE are of course 90 degrees wrt each other. Calculate the magnitude of the total net force. then calculate a from F and m.
ObjectivelyRational said:
Find x component of the net force, then find it in Y direction. THESE are of course 90 degrees wrt each other. Calculate the magnitude of the total net force. then calculate a from F and m.
ObjectivelyRational said:
Find x component of the net force, then find it in Y direction. THESE are of course 90 degrees wrt each other. Calculate the magnitude of the total net force. then calculate a from F and m.
 
  • #18
haruspex said:
In the triangle of forces you drew, what is the angle between the 65N and the 35N? Just a bit of elementary geometry needed.
63 degrees
 
  • #19
Cartesian components of a vector form a rectangle with the sides paralleling the coordinate axes and the vector itself forming the diagonal:

upload_2016-11-5_20-19-40.png


Note that the components ##f_x## and ##f_y## of vector ##f## are at right angles to each other and are parallel to the axes.

The magnitude of f is ##|f| = \sqrt{f_x^2 + f_y^2}##

I don't agree with the value of the x_component that you calculated in your post #17. Can you give more details of that calculation? The y_component looks okay.
 
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  • #20
SDTK said:
63 degrees
Ok, so you have a choice of approaches. For a simple resultant of two vectors, you can use the angle between them (when drawn in the nose-to-tail format of the force triangle) and apply the cosine rule, or for multiple applied forces you can reduce each to its X and Y components and find the sum along each axis.
 
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  • #21
thank you, thank you, thank you! I recalculated the F(net) x, getting 52 N.
The illustration you shared helped! :-)
upload_2016-11-5_21-3-17.png
 

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  • #22
haruspex said:
Ok, so you have a choice of approaches. For a simple resultant of two vectors, you can use the angle between them (when drawn in the nose-to-tail format of the force triangle) and apply the cosine rule, or for multiple applied forces you can reduce each to its X and Y components and find the sum along each axis.
thank you! I did not know the cosine rule. I looked it up, and see how works, and it gives me the right answer! :-)
 
  • #23
gneill said:
Cartesian components of a vector form a rectangle with the sides paralleling the coordinate axes and the vector itself forming the diagonal:

View attachment 108530

Note that the components ##f_x## and ##f_y## of vector ##f## are at right angles to each other and are parallel to the axes.

The magnitude of f is ##|f| = \sqrt{f_x^2 + f_y^2}##

I don't agree with the value of the x_component that you calculated in your post #17. Can you give more details of that calculation? The y_component looks okay.

gneil,
thank you! I posted a reply, but it looks like it went as a separate posting instead of a direct reply. I see my error in the x_ component calculation.
I (now) have 52N for F(net)x.
Thank you also for the notes about the Cartesian components for the net force vector!
 
  • #24
SDTK said:
gneil,
thank you! I posted a reply, but it looks like it went as a separate posting instead of a direct reply. I see my error in the x_ component calculation.
I (now) have 52N for F(net)x.
Thank you also for the notes about the Cartesian components for the net force vector!
You're welcome.

Looks like you now have two methods in your toolkit that you can use to add vectors. :smile:
 
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FAQ: Calculating Acceleration with Multiple Forces Acting on an Object

What is meant by "two forces act on an object"?

When we say that two forces act on an object, it means that there are two external forces acting on the object from opposite directions. These forces can be either pushing or pulling the object and can have different magnitudes and directions.

How do we determine the net force on an object when two forces act on it?

To determine the net force on an object when two forces act on it, we need to find the vector sum of the two forces. This can be done by using vector addition, where we add the magnitudes of the forces and consider their directions. The net force will be the resulting vector.

Can two equal forces acting on an object in opposite directions cancel each other out?

Yes, two equal forces acting on an object in opposite directions can cancel each other out. This is known as balanced forces, where the net force on the object is zero. As a result, the object will remain at rest or continue to move at a constant velocity.

What happens to an object when two unequal forces act on it in opposite directions?

When two unequal forces act on an object in opposite directions, the net force on the object will be the difference between the two forces. This will result in a non-zero net force, causing the object to accelerate in the direction of the larger force.

Can two forces acting on an object be in the same direction?

Yes, two forces can act on an object in the same direction. In this case, the forces will add up to increase the magnitude of the net force on the object, causing it to accelerate in the direction of the forces. This is known as unbalanced forces.

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