//05.prep
Workshop prep
Twenty minutes or less.
Week 5 — Dynamic Systems and Uniform Circular Motion. Pick a mode. Start a timer. That's it.
Pick a mode
The shortest path to walking in prepared.
Timer
5:00
//content
5-minute version
Two big set-ups. One sentence each.
- Coupled bodies / inclines / friction — draw an FBD per body, write per axis, decide static vs kinetic friction.
- Uniform circular motion — the net inward force equals ; do not draw a separate arrow.
Open the cheatsheet quiz, do 3 easy questions, close it. You’re prepped.
20-minute prep plan
| Time | Action |
|---|---|
| 0–5 min | Skim the cheatsheet tables (FBD workflow, circular motion set-ups). |
| 5–10 min | Re-do one worked example from each topic by hand — covering pen: Example 1 (coupled blocks), Example 2 (incline), Example 3 (vertical circle). |
| 10–15 min | Take the cheatsheet quiz. Don’t worry about the score. |
| 15–20 min | Read the matching “common mistakes” section in the in-depth note. |
What to revise first
Most students slip on three specific things in this week:
- Adding a centripetal force arrow to the FBD of a circling body. It’s already there as the net of the real forces.
- Skipping the sliding test on an incline and immediately using without checking vs .
- Wrong angle convention on the conical pendulum. In this course is from the horizontal, so (not ).
Key formulas
Likely workshop tasks
| Task type | What the setup usually looks like |
|---|---|
| Two-body FBD | Two blocks on a surface joined by a rope/spring; find and the internal force |
| Incline + friction | Block on a ramp; decide slide/no-slide, then find |
| Unbanked turn | Car on a flat curve; find required from and |
| Banked curve | No friction; find for a given design speed |
| Conical pendulum | String at from horizontal; find |
| Vertical circle | Find tension at top vs bottom |
Mistakes to avoid
- Adding as a separate arrow on the FBD. It’s the net inward force.
- Forgetting to convert km/h m/s (divide by 3.6) before .
- Using when the object is already sliding (use ); using when checking whether it slides (compare with ).
- Drawing the normal force not perpendicular to the surface.
- Treating a negative answer for as a real number — it just means a sign mistake on the FBD.
- Forgetting the spring’s natural length: orbit radius , so spring force is .
- Skipping units in the final answer.
Mini self-test
Try these without notes. Six minutes total.
- A 5 kg block sits on a 25° incline; . Does it slide?
- A 1500 kg car takes an unbanked 200 m radius curve at 25 m/s. What is the minimum needed?
- A 0.4 kg ball on a 1.0 m string moves in a vertical circle at m/s. What is the tension at the bottom?
- Two blocks (1 kg and 2 kg) on a frictionless surface are pushed together by a 9 N force on the 2 kg block. What is the contact force between them?
Answers:
| Q | Answer | Working hint |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | No, doesn’t slide | , so static friction is sufficient |
| 2 | ||
| 3 | N | |
| 4 | N | System: ; 1 kg FBD: N |
Done checklist
- Read the cheatsheet tables (FBD workflow and circular motion set-ups).
- Re-derived direction (or convinced yourself it points inward).
- Re-did one worked example by hand for each of: coupled blocks, incline, vertical circle.
- Cheatsheet quiz attempted.
- Mini self-test attempted.
That’s it. Close the laptop.
Source files used
EGD102-Physics/Lecture5_CTP1-1.pdfEGD102-Physics/EGD102 - Lecture5 - Notes.pdfEGD102-Physics/Tutorial 5.pdfEGD102-Physics/Tutorial 5_Solutions.pdf