Friction Worksheet 1
Friction Worksheet 1
Friction Worksheet
Draw Free-body diagrams and use Newton’s laws of Motion to solve the following problems.
2. A sled is pulled horizontally across the snow at constant velocity. The pulling force is 40 N.
a. What is the Kinetic Frictional Force on the Sled?(40 N)
b. If the weight of the sled is 200 N, what is the co‐efficient of Kinetic Friction (μk) between
the sled and snow?(0.20)
c. If 30 kg of wood is placed in the sled, what pulling force is needed to move the
sled at constant velocity?(98.8 N)
Name:________________________________________ Date:_____________________________
3. A 0.5 kg hockey puck slides across the ice starting with a velocity of 5 m/s. The puck slides
and slows for 100 meters under constant acceleration and then stops.
a. What is the acceleration of the hockey puck? (.125 m/s2)
b. What Kinetic Frictional Force is needed?(0.0625N)
c. What is the co‐efficient of friction between the ice and puck?(.013)
d. Recalculate a, b & c for a 1 kg hockey puck. (Does the weight change a or c?)
4. The tires on a 500 kg race car have a co‐efficient of Static Friction (μs) of 1.8. (We can use static
friction while tires are rolling, i.e. not moving relative to the ground. If the car skids, then we
would use kinetic friction)
a. What is the maximum braking force (Static Friction) that can be applied to the car?(8820 N)
b. What is the acceleration of the car during braking? (17.64m/s2)
c. If the race car has wings which increase the downward force by 4000 N, what
is the maximum braking force? What is the acceleration of the car during braking?(16020 N, 32.04 m/s2)
d. Return to the situation of the race car without wings. What is the braking force during
skidding (i.e. kinetic frictional force) if the co‐efficient of Kinetic Friction (μk) = 1.2? What is the acceleration
of the car during skidding?(5880 N, 11.76 m/s2)
(Does this tell you why drivers avoid skidding to decrease stopping distance?)