Figure 12-50 shows a 70kgclimber hanging by only the crimp holdof one hand on the edge of a shallow horizontal ledge in a rock wall. (The fingers are pressed down to gain purchase.) Her feet touch the rock wall at distanceH=2.0mdirectly below her crimped fingers but do not provide any support. Her center of mass is distance a=0.20mfrom the wall. Assume that the force from the ledge supporting her fingers is equally shared by the four fingers. What are the values of the(a) horizontal component Fhand (b) vertical component Fvof the force on eachfingertip?

Short Answer

Expert verified

a) The horizontal force component of force is17N .

b) The vertical force component of force is 170N.

Step by step solution

01

Listing the given quantities

The mass of climber is,m=70kg.

The climber touches the rock wall at a distance,H=2m.

The center of mass is at,a=0.20m .

02

Understanding the concept of component resolve

We can write the equation of the horizontal component of forces. We can then write the torque equation at point O. using these two equations, we can get the horizontal component of force. To find the vertical force component, use the vertical force equilibrium condition.

03

Free Body Diagram

Free Body Diagram:

04

(a) Calculations of the horizontal force component

Using equilibrium condition, the net force in x direction can be written as,

Fx=0

Substitute the values in the above expression, and we get,

Fy=0

(1)

Using equilibrium condition, the net force in y- direction can be written as,

Fy=0

Substitute the values in the above expression, and we get,

4Fvmg=0

(2)

Torque at point acan be calculated as,

mga(4Fh)H=0Fh=mga4H

Substitute the values in the above expression, and we get,

Fh=70 kg×9.8 m/s2×0.2 m4×2.0 m=17.16(1 kgm/s2×1 m1 m×1N1 kgm/s2)=17N

Thus, the horizontal force component of force is17N .

05

(b) Calculations of the vertical force component 

From equation 2, we can write,

Fv=mg/4

Substitute the values in the above expression, and we get,

Fv=70 kg×9.8 m/s24=171.675(1 kgm/s2×1N1 kgm/s2)~170N

Thus, the vertical force component of force is170N170N.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

Question: A uniform cubical crate is 0.750 m on each side and weighs 500 N . It rests on a floor with one edge against a very small, fixed obstruction. At what least height above the floor must a horizontal force of magnitude 350 N be applied to the crate to tip it?

In Fig. 12-42, what magnitude of (constant) forcefapplied horizontally at the axle of the wheelis necessary to raise the wheel over a step obstacle of heighth=3.00cm ? The wheel’s radius is r=6.00cm,and its mass is m=0.800kg.

In Fig. 12-73, a uniform beam with a weight of 60 Nand a length of 3.2 m is hinged at its lower end, and a horizontal force of magnitude 50 N acts at its upper end. The beam is held vertical by a cable that makes angle θ=25°with the ground and is attached to the beam at height h=2.0 m . What are (a) the tension in the cable and (b) the force on the beam from the hinge in unit-vector notation?

Four bricks of length L , identical and uniform, are stacked on a table in two ways, as shown in Fig. 12-83 (compare with Problem 63). We seek to maximize the overhang distance h in both arrangements. Find the optimum distancesa1 ,a2 ,b1 , andb2 , and calculate hfor the two arrangements.

Three piñatas hang from the (stationary) assembly of massless pulleys and cords seen in Fig. 12-21. One long cord runs from the ceiling at the right to the lower pulley at the left, looping halfway around all the pulleys. Several shorter cords suspend pulleys from the ceiling or piñatas from the pulleys. The weights (in newtons) of two piñatas are given.

(a) What is the weight of the third piñata? (Hint:A cord that loops halfway around a pulley pulls on the pulley with a net force that is twice the tension in the cord.)

(b) What is the tension in the short cord labeled with T?

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Physics Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free