| Your Results | Global Average | |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 5 | 5 |
| Correct | 0 | 3.36 |
| Score | 0% | 67% |
Which of the following surfaces would have the highest coefficient of friction?
steel |
|
concrete |
|
ice |
|
marble |
Coefficient of friction (μ) represents how much two materials resist sliding across each other. Smooth surfaces like ice have low coefficients of friction while rough surfaces like concrete have high μ.
For any given surface, the coefficient of static friction is ___________ the coefficient of kinetic friction.
opposite |
|
higher than |
|
equal to |
|
lower than |
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).
| 4 | |
| 17 | |
| 9 | |
| 10.5 |
The mechanical advantage (MA) of an inclined plane is the effort distance divided by the resistance distance. In this case, the effort distance is the length of the ramp and the resistance distance is the height of the green box:
MA = \( \frac{d_e}{d_r} \) = \( \frac{63 ft.}{7 ft.} \) = 9
| 100 lbs. | |
| 300 lbs. | |
| 50 lbs. | |
| 0 lbs. |
To balance this lever the torques on each side of the fulcrum must be equal. Torque is weight x distance from the fulcrum so the equation for equilibrium is:
Rada = Rbdb
where a represents the left side of the fulcrum and b the right, R is resistance (weight) and d is the distance from the fulcrum.Solving for Ra, our missing value, and plugging in our variables yields:
Ra = \( \frac{R_bd_b}{d_a} \) = \( \frac{60 lbs. \times 5 ft.}{6 ft.} \) = \( \frac{300 ft⋅lb}{6 ft.} \) = 50 lbs.
Power is the rate at which:
work is done |
|
friction is overcome |
|
potential energy is converted into kinetic energy |
|
input force is transferred to output force |
Power is the rate at which work is done, P = w/t, or work per unit time. The watt (W) is the unit for power and is equal to 1 joule (or newton-meter) per second. Horsepower (hp) is another familiar unit of power used primarily for rating internal combustion engines. 1 hp equals 746 watts.