R random1234 Full Member 10+ Year Member Joined Jul 22, 2012 Messages 308 Reaction score 13 Mar 20, 2013 #1 Members don't see this ad. never mind, i figured it out 🙂 Last edited: Mar 20, 2013
Postictal Raiden Full Member 15+ Year Member Joined Dec 26, 2008 Messages 5,436 Reaction score 4,042 Mar 20, 2013 #2 random1234 said: boxes A, B, and C each have a mass of 10 kg. If the boxes are accelerated upward at 2 m/s^2, what is the tension T2? I get that T2 = mg + ma + T3 So isn't that (10 * 10 = 100) + (10 * 2 = 20) + (100) = 220? But the answer is C, 240, not B, 220. Why is it 240? Click to expand... Reading the question the way you posted it, I imagined the two boxes as one big 20kg box pulled upward by a rope. F(net) = Tension in the rope - force of gravity 20 *2 (ma) = T - (20*10) T = 40N + 200N = 240N Upvote 0 Downvote
random1234 said: boxes A, B, and C each have a mass of 10 kg. If the boxes are accelerated upward at 2 m/s^2, what is the tension T2? I get that T2 = mg + ma + T3 So isn't that (10 * 10 = 100) + (10 * 2 = 20) + (100) = 220? But the answer is C, 240, not B, 220. Why is it 240? Click to expand... Reading the question the way you posted it, I imagined the two boxes as one big 20kg box pulled upward by a rope. F(net) = Tension in the rope - force of gravity 20 *2 (ma) = T - (20*10) T = 40N + 200N = 240N
R random1234 Full Member 10+ Year Member Joined Jul 22, 2012 Messages 308 Reaction score 13 Mar 20, 2013 #3 Yes that should have been the answer. EK wrote that the size is Box B, not Boxes B and C. Upvote 0 Downvote