Would you weigh less in an elevator Carol Hedden

Transcriber: tom carter
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

You step into an elevator.

It starts going down, fast.

What would happen if you jumped right when it started going down?

Would the ceiling hit your head? Ouch!

Do you stay suspended in the air while the elevator plummets down?

Let’s examine the elevator problem one step at a time.

First, consider a scale.

You know, the kind of scale you weigh yourself on.

When you step on a scale to weigh yourself,

there are two forces involved.

One, gravity pulls you down.

Two, the scale pushes you up.

What? You didn’t know a scale could push?

Of course it can! If it didn’t push up on you, you would go crashing through the floor.

This upward push is called the normal force and yes, it is normally there.

Since you’re just standing there on the scale, you’re not moving.

Therefore, you’re not accelerating.

Newton’s second law of motion – net force equals mass times acceleration –

tells us that if the acceleration equals zero, the net force must equal zero.

Which means that the force of gravity pulling you down must be equal to the force of the scale pushing you up.

Now let’s suppose you’re standing on that scale in an elevator.

At first, the elevator is standing still,

so you and the scale are standing still.

The two forces on you are equal and opposite.

You can read how hard the scale is pushing by looking at it.

We call that your weight.

Then, the elevator starts falling down.

You and the scale are in the elevator, so you are falling down too,

faster and faster.

That means you are accelerating downward.

Now there is a net force in the same direction as the acceleration – down.

Since gravity hasn’t changed, that must mean the scale isn’t pushing up as hard.

So the scale is reading a smaller number.

The faster the elevator accelerates, the less the scale pushes up.

What if you jumped? Would you stop falling?

Would the elevator hit your head?

Well, what’s pulling the elevator down? Gravity.

Is gravity pulling on you? Of course.

So your relative position in the elevator will stay the same.

The ceiling will only hit you if you can jump up to the ceiling.

Now consider: what would happen if the elevator accelerated upward

and, even more frightening, if someone snuck in and cut the cable holding the elevator,

what would happen then?

Think about it.

抄写员:tom carter
审稿人:Bedirhan Cinar

你走进电梯。

它开始下降,很快。

如果你在它开始下降的时候直接跳下去会发生什么?

天花板会撞到你的头吗? 哎哟!

当电梯坠落时,你是否一直悬浮在空中?

让我们一步一步地研究电梯问题。

首先,考虑一个规模。

你知道,你衡量自己的那种秤。

当您踏上秤称体重时,

涉及到两种力量。

一,重力把你拉下来。

第二,规模推你。

什么? 你不知道秤可以推动吗?

当然可以! 如果它没有推到你身上,你就会摔倒在地板上。

这种向上的推动力称为法向力,是的,它通常在那里。

因为你只是站在秤上,所以你一动不动。

因此,你没有加速。

牛顿第二运动定律——合力等于质量乘以加速度——

告诉我们,如果加速度为零,合力必须为零。

这意味着将您向下拉的重力必须等于将您向上推的力。

现在让我们假设你站在电梯里的那个秤上。

一开始,电梯是静止的,

所以你和秤都静止不动。

你身上的两种力量是相等且相反的。

您可以通过查看它来了解秤的推动力。

我们称之为你的体重。

然后,电梯开始下降。

你和天平都在电梯里,所以你也在下降,

越来越快。

这意味着你正在向下加速。

现在有一个与加速度方向相同的合力——向下。

由于重力没有改变,这一定意味着天平没有那么猛烈地向上推。

所以天平正在读取一个较小的数字。

电梯加速越快,秤向上推的越少。

如果你跳了怎么办? 你会停止跌倒吗?

电梯会撞到你的头吗?

是什么把电梯拉下来了? 重力。

重力在拉着你吗? 当然。

因此,您在电梯中的相对位置将保持不变。

只有当你能跳到天花板上时,天花板才会击中你。

现在想一想:如果电梯加速向上会发生什么

,更可怕的是,如果有人偷偷溜进去剪断了电梯的电缆,

那会发生什么?

想想看。