| Your Results | Global Average | |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 5 | 5 |
| Correct | 0 | 2.65 |
| Score | 0% | 53% |
Friction between two or more solid objects that are not moving relative to each other is called:
kinetic friction |
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dynamic friction |
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gravitational friction |
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static friction |
Static friction is friction between two or more solid objects that are not moving relative to each other. An example is the friction that prevents a box on a sloped surface from sliding farther down the surface.
For any given surface, the coefficient of static friction is ___________ the coefficient of kinetic friction.
equal to |
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higher than |
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lower than |
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opposite |
For any given surface, the coefficient of static friction is higher than the coefficient of kinetic friction. More force is required to initally get an object moving than is required to keep it moving. Additionally, static friction only arises in response to an attempt to move an object (overcome the normal force between it and the surface).
A truck is using a rope to pull a car. Tension in the rope is greatest in which of the following places?
tension is equal in all parts of the rope |
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near the truck |
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near the car |
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in the middle |
Tension is a force that stretches or elongates something. When a cable or rope is used to pull an object, for example, it stretches internally as it accepts the weight that it's moving. Although tension is often treated as applying equally to all parts of a material, it's greater at the places where the material is under the most stress.
The mechanical advantage of a third class lever is always:
less than one |
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not equal to one |
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greater than one |
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equal to one |
A third class lever is designed to multiply distance and speed at the expense of effort force. Because the effort force is greater than the resistance, the mechanical advantage of a third class lever is always less than one.
An example of a third class lever is a broom. The fulcrum is at your hand on the end of the broom, the effort force is your other hand in the middle, and the resistance is at the bottom bristles. The effort force of your hand in the middle multiplies the distance and speed of the bristles at the bottom but at the expense of producing a brushing force that's less than the force you're applying with your hand.
| 1.2 | |
| 1.9 | |
| 3.4 | |
| 0.4 |
Mechanical advantage (MA) is the ratio by which effort force relates to resistance force. If both forces are known, calculating MA is simply a matter of dividing resistance force by effort force:
MA = \( \frac{F_r}{F_e} \) = \( \frac{8 ft.}{20.0 ft.} \) = 0.4
In this case, the mechanical advantage is less than one meaning that each unit of effort force results in just 0.4 units of resistance force. However, a third class lever like this isn't designed to multiply force like a first class lever. A third class lever is designed to multiply distance and speed at the resistance by sacrificing force at the resistance. Different lever styles have different purposes and multiply forces in different ways.