Check Your Understanding A 550-kg sports car collides with a 2200-kg truck, and during the collision, the net force on each vehicle is the force exerted by the other. If the magnitude of the truck’s acceleration is
what is the magnitude of the sports car’s acceleration?
We have developed Newton’s second law and presented it as a vector equation in
[link] . This vector equation can be written as three component equations:
The second law is a description of how a body responds mechanically to its environment. The influence of the environment is the net force
the body’s response is the acceleration
and the strength of the response is inversely proportional to the mass
m . The larger the mass of an object, the smaller its response (its acceleration) to the influence of the environment (a given net force). Therefore, a body’s mass is a measure of its inertia, as we explained in
Newton’s First Law .
Force on a soccer ball
A 0.400-kg soccer ball is kicked across the field by a player; it undergoes acceleration given by
Find (a) the resultant force acting on the ball and (b) the magnitude and direction of the resultant force.
Strategy
The vectors in
and
format, which indicate force direction along the
x -axis and the
y -axis, respectively, are involved, so we apply Newton’s second law in vector form.
Solution
We apply Newton’s second law:
Magnitude and direction are found using the components of
:
Significance
We must remember that Newton’s second law is a vector equation. In (a), we are multiplying a vector by a scalar to determine the net force in vector form. While the vector form gives a compact representation of the force vector, it does not tell us how “big” it is, or where it goes, in intuitive terms. In (b), we are determining the actual size (magnitude) of this force and the direction in which it travels.
A particle of mass
is acted upon by four forces of magnitudes.
, with the directions as shown in the free-body diagram in
[link] . What is the acceleration of the particle?
Strategy
Because this is a two-dimensional problem, we must use a free-body diagram. First,
must be resolved into
x - and
y -components. We can then apply the second law in each direction.
Solution
We draw a free-body diagram as shown in
[link] . Now we apply Newton’s second law. We consider all vectors resolved into
x - and
y -components:
Thus, the net acceleration is
which is a vector of magnitude
directed at
to the positive
x -axis.
Significance
Numerous examples in everyday life can be found that involve three or more forces acting on a single object, such as cables running from the Golden Gate Bridge or a football player being tackled by three defenders. We can see that the solution of this example is just an extension of what we have already done.