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Applications of Forces AP Physics 1 Apparent Weight The weight of an object is the force of gravity on that object. Your sensation of weight is due to contact forces supporting you. This force could either be a normal force or a tension, depending on the situation. The most common example is your apparent weight while standing in an elevator. Sometimes you feel heavy in an elevator, and sometimes you feel light. That feeling is the normal force that pushes up on you. Apparent Weight If you are moving upwards and speeding up, your acceleration points up. This means the net force on you must also point up, which means that the normal force must be larger than gravity. This is why you feel heavy! 𝐹𝑛𝑒𝑡 = 𝑚𝑎 𝑁 − 𝑚𝑔 = 𝑚𝑎 𝑁 = 𝑚𝑎 + 𝑚𝑔 = 𝑚(𝑎 + 𝑔) If your acceleration points down, then it is negative. This would mean that you feel lighter than you are because normal force is smaller than gravity. Example Brian’s mass is 70 kg. He is standing on a scale in an elevator that is moving at 5.0 m/s. As the elevator stops, the scale reads 750 N. Before it stopped, was the elevator moving up or down? What is the magnitude of Brian’s acceleration? How long did the elevator take to come to rest? Suspended Objects Another common example in forces is an object being suspended from multiple ropes. The key to solving these problems is to break forces into horizontal and vertical components and use Newton’s second law in both directions. The net force on the object is equal to zero! Example If the suspended mass weighs 50 N, calculate the tension in the horizontal rope. Inclined Planes A common force problem in physics involves boxes on inclined planes. In these kinds of problems, we have to break forces into components and use Newton’s second law to calculate forces and accelerations that are parallel and perpendicular to the ramp. Example A 46 g domino slides down a 30 degree incline at a constant speed. What is the coefficient of friction? Example A boy and his sled have a combined mass of 65 kg. What is their acceleration as they start down an icy 22.6 degree incline with a coefficient of friction equal to 0.10? The boy is then pulled back to the top of the hill at a constant speed by a tow rope. What is the tension in the rope? Atwood Machines Atwood machines are devices that use pulleys and ropes to raise or lower masses. The keys to solving Atwood problems: The tension in a single rope is the same everywhere (if the rope is massless!). The magnitude of acceleration (if there is any) is the same for all objects in the system. FBD on each object in the system! Example A 200 kg set used in a play is stored in the loft above the stage. The rope holding the set passes up and over a pulley, then is tied backstage. The director tells a 100 kg stagehand to lower the set. When he unties the rope, the set falls and the unfortunate man is hoisted into the loft. What is the stagehand’s acceleration? Example A mass, m1 = 3.00kg, is resting on a frictionless horizontal table is connected to a cable that passes over a pulley and then is fastened to a hanging mass, m2 = 11.0 kg as shown below. Find the acceleration of each mass and the tension in the cable.