SRMcDonald
Aug 7, 2007, 01:56 PM
You are driving a 2500.0 kg car at a constant speed of 14.0 m/s along an icy, but straight and level road. While approaching a traffic light, it turns red. You slam on the brakes. Your wheels lock, the tires begin skidding, and the car slides to a halt in a distance of 25.0 m. What is the coefficient of sliding friction between your tires and the icy roadbed? Include a free body diagram.Here is how I try to answer it:
For this question I only have the normal force in the equation F friction = F normal * coefficient, so I have to figure out the force of friction, which will be the net force located on the left of my free body diagram. I'm guessing the only force acting on the right would be inertia, which would be:
F = m*a = (2500.0 kg)(-3.92 m/s/s) = -9800 N
I assume the force of friction on the locked tires and icy roadbed has to overcome the force of inertia plus the extra needed to accelerate at -3.92 m/s/s.
F net = m*a = (2500.0 kg)(-3.92 m/s/s) = -9800 N
So the force of friction is twice the size of inertia pushing on the car as it tries to stop, making it -19 600 N. Now that I have this force, I can find the coefficient.
Coefficient = F friction / F normal = (-19 600) / (24 500) = -0.8
Ignoring the negatives I attempted to make use of, I get 0.8 which seems a bit high, doesn't it? Where did I go wrong?
http://i7.photobucket.com/albums/y278/Green_Man8/ForceFBD2.jpg
Here are my questions:
1) Did I do this wrong?
2) What would be the correct use of negative signs to display direction? I think I confused myself by trying.
For this question I only have the normal force in the equation F friction = F normal * coefficient, so I have to figure out the force of friction, which will be the net force located on the left of my free body diagram. I'm guessing the only force acting on the right would be inertia, which would be:
F = m*a = (2500.0 kg)(-3.92 m/s/s) = -9800 N
I assume the force of friction on the locked tires and icy roadbed has to overcome the force of inertia plus the extra needed to accelerate at -3.92 m/s/s.
F net = m*a = (2500.0 kg)(-3.92 m/s/s) = -9800 N
So the force of friction is twice the size of inertia pushing on the car as it tries to stop, making it -19 600 N. Now that I have this force, I can find the coefficient.
Coefficient = F friction / F normal = (-19 600) / (24 500) = -0.8
Ignoring the negatives I attempted to make use of, I get 0.8 which seems a bit high, doesn't it? Where did I go wrong?
http://i7.photobucket.com/albums/y278/Green_Man8/ForceFBD2.jpg
Here are my questions:
1) Did I do this wrong?
2) What would be the correct use of negative signs to display direction? I think I confused myself by trying.