- #1
ruggler
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I have been trying to figure out this problem for a while. I am in AP Physics now, preparing for Higher Level IB Physics next year. A few physics friends and I gave this problem to my teacher but he was unable to give a solution, so I decided to come here. I love physics and my perpetual wondering about it has given birth to this (probably simple) problem.
A square, with sides h is upright on a flat surface, and the coefficient of kinetic friction between it and the surface is mu. It's mass is m and it is on Earth at sea level. If a person pushes on the box at the same height as the center of gravity and parallel to the floor, how hard must the person push to get it to tip over?
I'm not sure if the final statement is even specific enough, but I want to understand how a problem like this would work. My attempt describes several solutions my friends and I have come up with that are variations of this question.
I know this is definitely a torque problem, T=Fd
Friction=mu*mg
F=ma
obviously these...
We concluded that as soon as any force even acts, as long as it is greater than friction (I think), ignoring static friction, the bottom of the box will begin to tip to a certain theta with the floor. To make things simpler, we decided to allow the force to remain parallel to the floor and at the same height as the center of gravity. This allowed us to have normal and friction act at one point and the force at another, but I think there is still a force missing, or else this object will spin no matter what. I think it's the weight, but the center of gravity isn't on the torque that goes through this box.
If our premise is correct, one of us tried, arbitrarilly, drawing a torque from the center of mass to the center of the bottom of the box, saying friction acts there (before it tips), and another torque from the middle of the bottom of the box to the end of the box, where he said normal would act. Then he said the pushing force is basically acting on the center of mass (is this true?) and set the torque of friction and pushing force (on the first torque diagram) equal to the torque of the normal (on the second diagram). Does double torque like this exist?
I thought that you should ignore the process of actually tipping the box, and draw a torque from the pushing force to the corner where friction and normal act, but this diagram would be missing something that stops it from rotating indefinitely. I also thought that there is some way to draw a triangular torque going from the point of pushing, to the center of mass, to the corner where the box is rested, but I doubt that is correct.
Can someone just push me in the right direction for this simple variation of a rolling box problem? I would like to expand on this while I have free time in school to look at circles and squares on inclined planes, electromagnetic forces that change when the box is pushed (rather than constant pushing) and other stuff like that.
I was also wondering if it would be easier to make the pushing force always normal to the side of the box, and if this would involve beloved Calculus.
Thank you
Homework Statement
A square, with sides h is upright on a flat surface, and the coefficient of kinetic friction between it and the surface is mu. It's mass is m and it is on Earth at sea level. If a person pushes on the box at the same height as the center of gravity and parallel to the floor, how hard must the person push to get it to tip over?
I'm not sure if the final statement is even specific enough, but I want to understand how a problem like this would work. My attempt describes several solutions my friends and I have come up with that are variations of this question.
Homework Equations
I know this is definitely a torque problem, T=Fd
Friction=mu*mg
F=ma
obviously these...
The Attempt at a Solution
We concluded that as soon as any force even acts, as long as it is greater than friction (I think), ignoring static friction, the bottom of the box will begin to tip to a certain theta with the floor. To make things simpler, we decided to allow the force to remain parallel to the floor and at the same height as the center of gravity. This allowed us to have normal and friction act at one point and the force at another, but I think there is still a force missing, or else this object will spin no matter what. I think it's the weight, but the center of gravity isn't on the torque that goes through this box.
If our premise is correct, one of us tried, arbitrarilly, drawing a torque from the center of mass to the center of the bottom of the box, saying friction acts there (before it tips), and another torque from the middle of the bottom of the box to the end of the box, where he said normal would act. Then he said the pushing force is basically acting on the center of mass (is this true?) and set the torque of friction and pushing force (on the first torque diagram) equal to the torque of the normal (on the second diagram). Does double torque like this exist?
I thought that you should ignore the process of actually tipping the box, and draw a torque from the pushing force to the corner where friction and normal act, but this diagram would be missing something that stops it from rotating indefinitely. I also thought that there is some way to draw a triangular torque going from the point of pushing, to the center of mass, to the corner where the box is rested, but I doubt that is correct.
Can someone just push me in the right direction for this simple variation of a rolling box problem? I would like to expand on this while I have free time in school to look at circles and squares on inclined planes, electromagnetic forces that change when the box is pushed (rather than constant pushing) and other stuff like that.
I was also wondering if it would be easier to make the pushing force always normal to the side of the box, and if this would involve beloved Calculus.
Thank you