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?

Short Answer

Expert verified

a) The weight of the third piñata is 15 N .

b) Tension in the short cord labelled is 10 N .

Step by step solution

01

The given data

The pulley system is in equilibrium, having various weights attached to it.

02

Understanding the concept of pulleys

We use the concept of balanced forces to determine the magnitudes of the various tensions and forces acting on the cords. We make use of free-body diagrams for pulleys.

Formulae:

The value of the net force at equilibrium, Fnet=0 (i)

03

a) Calculation of the weight of the third piñata

We will consider a free body diagram for each of the pulleys and balance the forces for each.

The tension in each part of the red rope is the same; this is as it wound continuously on the pulleys.

Let it be denoted as T'. Let, the tension in the green cords be denoted asF1,F2,F3 , and T as indicated in the diagram. Let the unknown weight be w.

We now consider the first pulley on the right side, to have weight 17 N hanging from it. The forces acting on this system are in each of the red ropesT'andF1in the green cord.

All three are directed upwards, whereas the weight is directed downwards.

Now, the net force equation for this pulley considering equation (i) can be given as:

F1+T'-17=0F1+2T'=17.................(i)

Similarly, for the next pulleys, we write the force equations using equation (i) as follows:

role="math" localid="1660977557551" 2T'=10...........(ii)F3-2T'=0............(iii)T-2T'=0.............(iv)3T'-w=0.............(v)

From equation (ii), we get,

T'=5N

And using this value of T’ in equation (v), we find,

w=15N

Hence, the value of the weight of the piñata is 15 N .

04

b) Calculation of the tension of the short labelled cord

Also, from equation (iv), we calculate the value of the tension using the value of

T'=5N can be calculated as:

T25N=0T=10N

Hence, the value of the tension of the short cord is 10 N .

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

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.

A mine elevator is supported by a single steel cable2.5cmin diameter. The total mass of the elevator cage and occupants is670kg .By how much does the cable stretch when the elevator hangs by (a)12m of cableand (b) 362mof cable?(Neglect the mass of the cable.)

Figure 12-18 shows a mobile ofQ toy penguins hanging from a ceiling. Each crossbar is horizontal, has negligible mass, and extends three times as far to the right of the wire supporting it as to the left. Penguin 1 has mass m1=48kg. What are the masses of

(a) penguin 2,

(b) penguin 3, and

(c) penguin 4?

For the stepladder shown in the Figure, sidesACand CE are each 2.44m long and hinged at . Bar is a tie-rod 0.762mlong, halfway up. A man weighing 854Nclimbs 1.80m along the ladder. Assuming that the floor is frictionless and neglecting the mass of the ladder.Find

(a)the tension in the tie-rod and the magnitudes of the forces on the ladder from the floor at

(b) Aand

(c) E . (Hint: Isolate parts of the ladder in applying the equilibrium conditions.)

Figure:

In Fig. 12-41, a climber with a weight of 533.8 N is held by a belay rope connected to her climbing harness and belay device; the force of the rope on her has a line of action through her center of mass. The indicated angles are θ=40.0°andϕ=30.0°. If her feet are on the verge of sliding on the vertical wall, what is the coefficient of static friction between her climbing shoes and the wall?

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