Syllabus Edition

First teaching 2020

Last exams 2024

Turning Effects of Forces ( CIE A Level Physics )

Revision note.

Katie M

  • A couple is a pair of forces that acts to produce rotation only
  • Unlike moments of a single force, the moment of a couple doesn’t depend on a pivot, only on the perpendicular distance between the two forces
  • Equal in magnitude
  • Opposite in direction
  • Perpendicular to the distance between them

Couples diagram, downloadable AS & A Level Physics revision notes

Diagram of a couple

  • Couples produce a resultant force of zero , so, due to Newton’s Second law ( F = ma ), the object does not accelerate
  • The size of this turning effect is given by its torque

Worked example

WE - Couples question image, downloadable AS & A Level Physics revision notes

  • Equal in size
  • In opposite directions
  • B is incorrect as the forces are in the same direction
  • C is incorrect as the forces are different in size
  • D is incorrect as the distance between the forces is not perpendicular

The forces that make up a couple cannot share the same line of action which is the line through the point at which the force is applied. An example of this is shown in the diagram below

Forces with same line of action, downloadable AS & A Level Physics revision notes

  • The moment of a couple is known as a torque
  • You can calculate the torque of a couple with the following equation

Torque τ ( N m ) = one of the forces ( N ) × perpendicular distance between the forces ( m )

A steering wheel of diameter 40 cm and the force of the couple needed to turn it is 10 N.

Calculate the torque on the steering wheel.

equilibrium of turning force experiment

The forces given might not always be perpendicular to the distance between them. In this case, remember to find the component of the force vector that is perpendicular. You can learn more on how to do this in the ‘Resolving Vectors’ section of ‘Scalars & Vectors’

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Author: Katie M

Katie has always been passionate about the sciences, and completed a degree in Astrophysics at Sheffield University. She decided that she wanted to inspire other young people, so moved to Bristol to complete a PGCE in Secondary Science. She particularly loves creating fun and absorbing materials to help students achieve their exam potential.

9.2 The Second Condition for Equilibrium

Learning objectives.

By the end of this section, you will be able to:

  • State the second condition that is necessary to achieve equilibrium.
  • Explain torque and the factors on which it depends.
  • Describe the role of torque in rotational mechanics.

The second condition necessary to achieve equilibrium involves avoiding accelerated rotation (maintaining a constant angular velocity). A rotating body or system can be in equilibrium if its rate of rotation is constant and remains unchanged by the forces acting on it. To understand what factors affect rotation, let us think about what happens when you open an ordinary door by rotating it on its hinges.

Several familiar factors determine how effective you are in opening the door. See Figure 9.6 . First of all, the larger the force, the more effective it is in opening the door—obviously, the harder you push, the more rapidly the door opens. Also, the point at which you push is crucial. If you apply your force too close to the hinges, the door will open slowly, if at all. Most people have been embarrassed by making this mistake and bumping up against a door when it did not open as quickly as expected. Finally, the direction in which you push is also important. The most effective direction is perpendicular to the door—we push in this direction almost instinctively.

The magnitude, direction, and point of application of the force are incorporated into the definition of the physical quantity called torque. Torque is the rotational equivalent of a force. It is a measure of the effectiveness of a force in changing or accelerating a rotation (changing the angular velocity over a period of time). In equation form, the magnitude of torque is defined to be

where τ τ (the Greek letter tau) is the symbol for torque, r r is the distance from the pivot point to the point where the force is applied, F F is the magnitude of the force, and Ξ Ξ is the angle between the force and the vector directed from the point of application to the pivot point, as seen in Figure 9.6 and Figure 9.7 . An alternative expression for torque is given in terms of the perpendicular lever arm r ⊄ r ⊄ as shown in Figure 9.6 and Figure 9.7 , which is defined as

The perpendicular lever arm r ⊄ r ⊄ is the shortest distance from the pivot point to the line along which F F acts; it is shown as a dashed line in Figure 9.6 and Figure 9.7 . Note that the line segment that defines the distance r ⊄ r ⊄ is perpendicular to F F , as its name implies. It is sometimes easier to find or visualize r ⊄ r ⊄ than to find both r r and Ξ Ξ . In such cases, it may be more convenient to use τ = r ⊄ F τ = r ⊄ F rather than τ = rF sin Ξ τ = rF sin Ξ for torque, but both are equally valid.

The SI unit of torque is newtons times meters, usually written as N · m N · m . For example, if you push perpendicular to the door with a force of 40 N at a distance of 0.800 m from the hinges, you exert a torque of 32 N·m(0.800 m × 40 N × sin 90Âș) relative to the hinges. If you reduce the force to 20 N, the torque is reduced to 16 N·m 16 N·m , and so on.

The torque is always calculated with reference to some chosen pivot point. For the same applied force, a different choice for the location of the pivot will give you a different value for the torque, since both r r and ξ ξ depend on the location of the pivot. Any point in any object can be chosen to calculate the torque about that point. The object may not actually pivot about the chosen “pivot point.”

Note that for rotation in a plane, torque has two possible directions. Torque is either clockwise or counterclockwise relative to the chosen pivot point, as illustrated for points B and A, respectively, in Figure 9.7 . If the object can rotate about point A, it will rotate counterclockwise, which means that the torque for the force is shown as counterclockwise relative to A. But if the object can rotate about point B, it will rotate clockwise, which means the torque for the force shown is clockwise relative to B. Also, the magnitude of the torque is greater when the lever arm is longer.

Now, the second condition necessary to achieve equilibrium is that the net external torque on a system must be zero . An external torque is one that is created by an external force. You can choose the point around which the torque is calculated. The point can be the physical pivot point of a system or any other point in space—but it must be the same point for all torques. If the second condition (net external torque on a system is zero) is satisfied for one choice of pivot point, it will also hold true for any other choice of pivot point in or out of the system of interest. (This is true only in an inertial frame of reference.) The second condition necessary to achieve equilibrium is stated in equation form as

where net means total. Torques, which are in opposite directions are assigned opposite signs. A common convention is to call counterclockwise (ccw) torques positive and clockwise (cw) torques negative.

When two children balance a seesaw as shown in Figure 9.8 , they satisfy the two conditions for equilibrium. Most people have perfect intuition about seesaws, knowing that the lighter child must sit farther from the pivot and that a heavier child can keep a lighter one off the ground indefinitely.

Example 9.1

She saw torques on a seesaw.

The two children shown in Figure 9.8 are balanced on a seesaw of negligible mass. (This assumption is made to keep the example simple—more involved examples will follow.) The first child has a mass of 26.0 kg and sits 1.60 m from the pivot.(a) If the second child has a mass of 32.0 kg, how far is she from the pivot? (b) What is F p F p , the supporting force exerted by the pivot?

Both conditions for equilibrium must be satisfied. In part (a), we are asked for a distance; thus, the second condition (regarding torques) must be used, since the first (regarding only forces) has no distances in it. To apply the second condition for equilibrium, we first identify the system of interest to be the seesaw plus the two children. We take the supporting pivot to be the point about which the torques are calculated. We then identify all external forces acting on the system.

Solution (a)

The three external forces acting on the system are the weights of the two children and the supporting force of the pivot. Let us examine the torque produced by each. Torque is defined to be

Here Ξ = 90Âș Ξ = 90Âș , so that sin Ξ = 1 sin Ξ = 1 for all three forces. That means r ⊄ = r r ⊄ = r for all three. The torques exerted by the three forces are first,

Note that a minus sign has been inserted into the second equation because this torque is clockwise and is therefore negative by convention. Since F p F p acts directly on the pivot point, the distance r p r p is zero. A force acting on the pivot cannot cause a rotation, just as pushing directly on the hinges of a door will not cause it to rotate. Now, the second condition for equilibrium is that the sum of the torques on both children is zero. Therefore

Weight is mass times the acceleration due to gravity. Entering mg mg for w w , we get

Solve this for the unknown r 2 r 2 :

The quantities on the right side of the equation are known; thus, r 2 r 2 is

As expected, the heavier child must sit closer to the pivot (1.30 m versus 1.60 m) to balance the seesaw.

Solution (b)

This part asks for a force F p F p . The easiest way to find it is to use the first condition for equilibrium, which is

The forces are all vertical, so that we are dealing with a one-dimensional problem along the vertical axis; hence, the condition can be written as

where we again call the vertical axis the y -axis. Choosing upward to be the positive direction, and using plus and minus signs to indicate the directions of the forces, we see that

This equation yields what might have been guessed at the beginning:

So, the pivot supplies a supporting force equal to the total weight of the system:

Entering known values gives

The two results make intuitive sense. The heavier child sits closer to the pivot. The pivot supports the weight of the two children. Part (b) can also be solved using the second condition for equilibrium, since both distances are known, but only if the pivot point is chosen to be somewhere other than the location of the seesaw’s actual pivot!

Several aspects of the preceding example have broad implications. First, the choice of the pivot as the point around which torques are calculated simplified the problem. Since F p F p is exerted on the pivot point, its lever arm is zero. Hence, the torque exerted by the supporting force F p F p is zero relative to that pivot point. The second condition for equilibrium holds for any choice of pivot point, and so we choose the pivot point to simplify the solution of the problem.

Second, the acceleration due to gravity canceled in this problem, and we were left with a ratio of masses. This will not always be the case . Always enter the correct forces—do not jump ahead to enter some ratio of masses.

Third, the weight of each child is distributed over an area of the seesaw, yet we treated the weights as if each force were exerted at a single point. This is not an approximation—the distances r 1 r 1 and r 2 r 2 are the distances to points directly below the center of gravity of each child. As we shall see in the next section, the mass and weight of a system can act as if they are located at a single point.

Finally, note that the concept of torque has an importance beyond static equilibrium. Torque plays the same role in rotational motion that force plays in linear motion. We will examine this in the next chapter.

Take-Home Experiment

Take a piece of modeling clay and put it on a table, then mash a cylinder down into it so that a ruler can balance on the round side of the cylinder while everything remains still. Put a penny 8 cm away from the pivot. Where would you need to put two pennies to balance? Three pennies?

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  • Authors: Paul Peter Urone, Roger Hinrichs
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IMAGES

  1. Lab Report PHY210 Experiment 1 Equilibrium Of Turning Force

    equilibrium of turning force experiment

  2. PPT

    equilibrium of turning force experiment

  3. PPT

    equilibrium of turning force experiment

  4. States of Equilibrium

    equilibrium of turning force experiment

  5. Experiment 1 (Equilibrium of Turning Forces)

    equilibrium of turning force experiment

  6. Turning Effect of Forces (Part 2)

    equilibrium of turning force experiment

VIDEO

  1. EQUILIBRIUM AND THE TURNING EFFECT OF A FORCE

  2. Equilibrium chapter 4 Turning effect of Forces class 9 new physics book Sindh board unit 4

  3. Equilibrium of forces #experiment

  4. Turning force, Physics ch 1 part 1, 10th ICSE

  5. 9Th Class Physics Chapter 4 || Turning Effect Of Forces || Lecture 3

  6. Moment and Equilibrium Questions IGCSE/O level Physics

COMMENTS

  1. Equilibrium and Turning Forces - Anspear

    equilibrium. A ball resting on a horizontal surface is always in neutral equilibrium, because its centre of gravity always acts through its base, the point at which it touches the surface. The turning effect of a force is called a MOMENT. If we open a door, steer a car or use a spanner we are employing the turning effect of a force.

  2. Experiment Equilibrium of Turning Force - Studocu

    The object Mo and the weight M started with M = 40g was hanged at point C. The position of Mo was adjusted until the ruler is horizontal and stable. The distance đ‘„ was measured (between points B and C). Step 3 was repeated with different weights (m = 50g, 60g, 70, 80 and 90g).

  3. Turning Effects of Forces | CIE A Level Physics Revision ...

    Revision notes on 4.1.3 Turning Effects of Forces for the CIE A Level Physics syllabus, written by the Physics experts at Save My Exams.

  4. 3: The principle of moments - CCEA Purpose - BBC

    Calculate the turning forces, F 1 and F 2, using W = mg. Calculate the clockwise and anticlockwise moments.

  5. Turning Effect of Forces - Super Physics

    Principle of Moments. When an object is in equilibrium, the sum of clockwise moments about a point = the sum of anticlockwise moments about same point. Conditions for Equilibrium of an Object. Resultant force acting on it is zero.

  6. Episode 203: Turning effects | IOPSpark

    It is important to ensure that each step in the argument leading to an application of moments to general equilibrium situations is made as clear as possible. Lesson Summary. Discussion: Moments and turning effects (10 minutes) Student experiment: Weighing a broom/laboratory stand (10 minutes)

  7. 9.2 The Second Condition for Equilibrium - OpenStax

    State the second condition that is necessary to achieve equilibrium. Explain torque and the factors on which it depends. Describe the role of torque in rotational mechanics.

  8. TITLE: Forces and Equilibrium – Moment of a Force.

    The moment of a force can be defined as the turning effect of a force about a pivot. It can be calculated by using the expression moment of a force = force x perpendicular distance from the pivot. In this experiment the optical pin placed at the 40cm mark provided the pivot point.

  9. Experiment#10 - Equilibrium of a Rigid Body

    Discussion of equilibrium. First condition of equilibrium. An object at rest is in equilibrium (review rotational equilibrium in your text). The vector sum of all the forces exerted on the body must be equal to zero. ∑F = 0. Second condition of equilibrium. The resting object also shows another aspect of equilibrium.

  10. Experiment 1 (Equilibrium of Turning Forces) | PDF | Weight ...

    The document is a lab report for an experiment on the equilibrium of turning forces. The objective was to determine the mass of an object and the mass of a ruler by applying the principle that the sum of clockwise torques equals the sum of counter-clockwise torques.