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NJIT PHYS 111 - Force and Motion II

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Physics 111 Practice Problem Statements 05 Force and Motion II – Friction, Circular Motion SJ 8th Ed.: Ch. 5.8, 6.1 – 6.3Slide 2Slide 3Slide 4Slide 5Slide 6Slide 7Slide 8Slide 9Slide 10Slide 118/8/2011 Physics 111 Practice Problem Statements 05 Force and Motion II – Friction, Circular Motion SJ 8th Ed.: Ch. 5.8, 6.1 – 6.3•Dynamics Summary•Friction Basics–Static Friction–Kinetic Friction•Properties of Friction•Sample Problems•Uniform Circular Motion - Centripetal Force–Free Body Diagrams–Sample Problems•Non-Uniform Circular Motion•Accelerated Frames of Reference •Drag Forces and Terminal SpeedContents:6-4E, 6-5E*, 6-19P, 6-22P, 6-23P, 6-24P, 6.37, 6-39P, 6-41P, 6-43P*, 6-47P*8/8/2011 Problem 6-4E: The mysterious sliding stones. Along the remote Racetrack Playa in Death Valley, California, stones sometimes gouge out prominent trails in the desert floor, as if they had been migrating (See Fig. 6-18). For years curiosity mounted about why the stones moved. One explanation was that strong winds during the occasional rainstorms would drag the rough stones over ground softened by rain. When the desert dried out, the trails behind the stones were hard-baked in place. According to measurements, the coefficient of kinetic friction between the stones and the wet playa ground is about 0.80. What horizontal force is needed on a stone of typical mass 20 kg to maintain the stone's motion once a gust has started it moving? (Story continues with Exercise 32.)8/8/2011 Problem 6-5E*: A person pushes horizontally with a force of 220 N on a 55 kg crate to move it across a level floor. The coefficient of kinetic friction is 0.35. (a) What is the magnitude of the frictional force? (b) What is the magnitude of the crate's acceleration?8/8/2011 Problem 6-19P: Block B in the Figure weighs 711 N. The coefficient of staticfriction between block and table is 0.25; assume that the cord between B and the knot is horizontal. Find the maximum weight of block A for which the system will be stationary.8/8/2011 Problem 6-22P: In the figure, two blocks are connected over a pulley. The mass of block A is 10 kg and the coefficient of kinetic friction between A and the incline is 0.20. Angle  of the incline is 30°. Block A slides down the incline at constant speed. What is the mass of block B?8/8/2011 Problem 6-23P: Two blocks, of weights 3.6 N and 7.2 N, are connected by a massless string and slide down a 30° inclined plane. The coefficient of kinetic friction between the lighter block and the plane is 0.10; that between the heavier block and the plane is 0.20. Assuming that the lighter block leads, find (a) the magnitude of the acceleration of the blocks and (b) the tension in the string. (c) Describe the motion if, instead, the heavier block leads8/8/2011 Problem 6-24P: In the figure, a box of Cheerios and a box of Wheaties are accelerated across a horizontal surface by a horizontal force F applied to the Cheerios box. The magnitude of the frictional force on the Cheerios box is 2.0 N, and the magnitude of the frictional force on the Wheaties box is 4.0 N. If the magnitude of F is 12 N, what is the magnitude of the force on the Wheaties box from the Cheerios box?8/8/2011 Problem 6-39P: What is the smallest radius of an unbanked (flat) track around which a bicyclist can travel if her speed is 29 km/h and the coefficient of static friction between tires and track is 0.32?8/8/2011 Problem 6-41P: A puck of mass m slides on a frictionless table while attached to a hanging cylinder of mass M by a cord through a hole in the table (see figure). What speed keeps the cylinder at rest?8/8/2011 Problem 6-43P*: A student of weight 667 N rides a steadily rotating Ferris wheel (the student sits upright). At the highest point, the magnitude of the normal force N on the student from the seat is 556 N. (a) Does the student feel “light” or “heavy” there? (b) What is the magnitude of N at the lowest point? (c) What is the magnitude N if the wheel's speed is doubled?8/8/2011 Problem 6-47P*: As shown in the figure, a 1.34 kg ball is connected by means of two massless strings to a vertical, rotating rod. The strings are tied to the rod and are taut. The tension in the upper string is 35 N. (a) Draw the free-body diagram for the ball. What are (b) the tension in the lower string, (c) the net force on the ball, and (d) the speed of the


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