- #1
DrBanana
- 51
- 4
An alternative title could have been "how do forces propagate" but google searches bring up things related to waves only.
Initially my problems started with a mass on a spring but I was able to boil it down to any general system comprising at least two 'parts' in succession.
Suppose you have two boxes touching each other on a frictionless surface. So if you apply a force with your hand then the boxes will move. When solving these types of problems the assumption is that, the contact force between the forces is less (not equal) than the force applied by the hand. My question is why. Suppose I apply a force F on box 1 to the right. I was under the impression that this force would propagate itself to box 2 as well (yes I know this would mean that box 2 would gain a different acceleration if it had different mass), so box 1 would be applying F on box 2, but by Newton's 3rd Law, box 2 will apply a force -F on box 1. So the net force on box 1 is F-F=0. Obviously that doesn't happen in reality, but why? Does this mean, if I apply a force on one end of some wire that only consists of a single thread of atoms, the contact force between each successive pair of atoms decreases?
By the way I realised I had this misconception because I was trying to get an understanding of applying a force to a deformable body, and why after some point it stops deforming. The usual explanation goes that the intermolecular bonds become strong enough to cancel out the applied force, but here I am left wondering (because of the thought process above) why it isn't just cancelled out immediately.
Initially my problems started with a mass on a spring but I was able to boil it down to any general system comprising at least two 'parts' in succession.
Suppose you have two boxes touching each other on a frictionless surface. So if you apply a force with your hand then the boxes will move. When solving these types of problems the assumption is that, the contact force between the forces is less (not equal) than the force applied by the hand. My question is why. Suppose I apply a force F on box 1 to the right. I was under the impression that this force would propagate itself to box 2 as well (yes I know this would mean that box 2 would gain a different acceleration if it had different mass), so box 1 would be applying F on box 2, but by Newton's 3rd Law, box 2 will apply a force -F on box 1. So the net force on box 1 is F-F=0. Obviously that doesn't happen in reality, but why? Does this mean, if I apply a force on one end of some wire that only consists of a single thread of atoms, the contact force between each successive pair of atoms decreases?
By the way I realised I had this misconception because I was trying to get an understanding of applying a force to a deformable body, and why after some point it stops deforming. The usual explanation goes that the intermolecular bonds become strong enough to cancel out the applied force, but here I am left wondering (because of the thought process above) why it isn't just cancelled out immediately.