An object acted o by three forces moves with a constant velocity?
One force acting on the object is in the positive x direction and has a magnitude of 6.5 N; a second force has a magnitude of 4.4N and points in the negative y direction. Find the direction and magnitude of the third force acting on the object.
I went through this problem and solved it and got the answers. 7.85 N for force and 145.9 degrees for direction. Even though i solved it i'm not really grasping the concept behind this question. Can someone please solve this step by step and tell me the purpose of each step?
One force acting on the object is in the positive x direction and has a magnitude of 6.5 N; a second force has a magnitude of 4.4N and points in the negative y direction. Find the direction and magnitude of the third force acting on the object.
I went through this problem and solved it and got the answers. 7.85 N for force and 145.9 degrees for direction. Even though i solved it i'm not really grasping the concept behind this question. Can someone please solve this step by step and tell me the purpose of each step?
1 Answer
Organize the information the problem has provided to see how to reach the solution. The key here is that constant velocity indicates 0 net force.
Explanation:
I will start by deconstructing the problem.
An object acted on by three forces moves with a constant velocity
If an object is moving at constant velocity, it means that it has an acceleration of 0. Since
(remember that force not only has a magnitude (in Newtons) but also direction (in degrees). I'm setting the positive x-axis as 0 degrees for this problem, as it's very common.)
One force acting on the object is in the positive x direction and has a magnitude of 6.5 N; a second force has a magnitude of 4.4N and points in the negative y direction.
We are given two forces:
Find the direction and magnitude of the third force acting on the object.
We know two of three forces, as well as the net force on the object. We can now calculate the third force.
We should start by adding
(note that the two triangles form a right triangle, making this easy. If not, there would be more trigonometry here - calculating the horizontal and vertical magnitudes separately before similarly combining them. Look more into vector addition.)
Now that we know