- #1
Cyrus
- 3,238
- 17
My friends a pre-med student and he's taking basic phyiscs 1. He asked me to do two problems. Can you double check to make sure I did not tell him the wrong thing!
Problem 1.)
There are two square masses, side by side on a frictionless pond. Mass A is 150kg, and mass b, is 50kg. A force of 100N is applied at mass A, find the reaction force that mass B exerts on mass A.
So I said on block A: simga(F): (150)a = 100N - F
and on block B: sigma(F): F = 50a
since both blocks are in contact, they have to have the same acceleration, so both a's are equal.
so that means a = F/50, and I plug that into block A's equation.
150(F/50) = 100 -F
and so F = 25 N
Does that sound right?
I did not have a solution to check for a mistake. And i feel stupid asking this question, but his test is comming up and I don't want him to fail because of what I told him. I was real stupid the first time I did it because I approached it as a statics problem without thinking, I just said oh, its 100N...errrrrr whoops... that was dumb of me.
Problem 1.)
There are two square masses, side by side on a frictionless pond. Mass A is 150kg, and mass b, is 50kg. A force of 100N is applied at mass A, find the reaction force that mass B exerts on mass A.
So I said on block A: simga(F): (150)a = 100N - F
and on block B: sigma(F): F = 50a
since both blocks are in contact, they have to have the same acceleration, so both a's are equal.
so that means a = F/50, and I plug that into block A's equation.
150(F/50) = 100 -F
and so F = 25 N
Does that sound right?
I did not have a solution to check for a mistake. And i feel stupid asking this question, but his test is comming up and I don't want him to fail because of what I told him. I was real stupid the first time I did it because I approached it as a statics problem without thinking, I just said oh, its 100N...errrrrr whoops... that was dumb of me.
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