While on a very smooth level transcontinental plane flight, your coffee cup sits motionless on your tray. Are there forces acting on the cup? If so, how do they differ from the forces that would be acting on the cup if it sat on your kitchen table at home?
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Textbook Solutions for Physics for Scientists and Engineers,
Question
ENGINEERING APPLICATION Your car is stuck in a mud hole. You are alone, but you have a long, strong rope. Having studied physics, you tie the rope tautly to a telephone pole and pull on it sideways, as shown in Figure 4-42. (a) Find the force exerted by the rope on the car when the angle _ is 3.00 and you are pulling with a force of 400 N, but the car does not move. (b) How strong must the rope be if it takes a force of 600 N to move the car when _ is 4.00?
Solution
The first step in solving 4 problem number 53 trying to solve the problem we have to refer to the textbook question: ENGINEERING APPLICATION Your car is stuck in a mud hole. You are alone, but you have a long, strong rope. Having studied physics, you tie the rope tautly to a telephone pole and pull on it sideways, as shown in Figure 4-42. (a) Find the force exerted by the rope on the car when the angle _ is 3.00 and you are pulling with a force of 400 N, but the car does not move. (b) How strong must the rope be if it takes a force of 600 N to move the car when _ is 4.00?
From the textbook chapter NEWTONS LAWS you will find a few key concepts needed to solve this.
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