Many physical properties, such as force and mass, cannot be measured directly. R
ID: 1417810 • Letter: M
Question
Many physical properties, such as force and mass, cannot be measured directly. Rather, some other physical property is measured and the desired physical property computed from the results. For example, a bathroom scale does not actually measure mass or "weight," but rather the compression distance of a spring. The numerical values on the scale are calibrated from the compression distance using basic physics principles such as Newton's second law. Coefficients of friction cannot be measured directly. In this problem, we are going to learn how we can indirectly measure the coefficient of kinetic friction between two surfaces by directly measuring the expansion of a spring. Consider the problem in the figure, where a 4.34 kg block is dragged by a spring on a (relatively) frictionless surface. Suppose the block reaches a rough patch and the spring stretches by 9.25 cm. Compute the coefficient of kinetic friction between the block and the surface if the spring has a force constant of 122.0 N/m.
Explanation / Answer
Here the friction force becomes equal with the spring force
therefore
Spring force = Kx where K is spring constant , x is stretch of the spring
Friction force = umg where u is the coefficient of friction , m is mass and g is acceleration due to gravity
Spring force = friction force
Kx = umg
u = Kx/mg =0.265
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