!thatnormal1.png|width=500!
Imagine that you have an indestructible boxcar sitting on frictionless railroad track. The boxcar has length *L*, height *H*, and width *W*. It has *N* cannonballs of radius *R* and mass *M* stacked up against one end. If I move the cannonballs in any fashion -- slowly carrying them, rolling them, firing them out of a cannon -- what is the furthest I can move the boxcar along the rails? Which method should I use to move the boxcar the furthest? Assume that the inside walls are perfectly absorbing, so that collisions are perfectly inelastic.
h2. Part A
h4. Solution One
{toggle-cloak:id=sysa} *System:* {cloak:id=sysa}Box as [point particle].{cloak}
{toggle-cloak:id=inta} *Interactions:* {cloak:id=inta}External influences from the earth ([gravity|gravity (near-earth)]), the wall ([normal force]) and the person ([applied force]).{cloak}
{toggle-cloak:id=moda} *Model:* {cloak:id=moda}[Point Particle Dynamics].{cloak}
{toggle-cloak:id=appa} *Approach:*
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{toggle-cloak:id=diaga} {color:red} *Diagrammatic Representation* {color}
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We begin with a free body diagram for the box:
!thatfbd1.jpg!
{note}It is important to note that any surface has the potential to exert a normal force and that the normal is always perpendicular to the plane of the surface. If the wall did not exert a normal force, the box would simply pass through it.{note}
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{toggle-cloak:id=matha} {color:red} *Mathematical Representation* {color}
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From the free body diagram, we can write the equations of [Newton's 2nd Law|Newton's Second Law].
{latex}\begin{large}\[\sum F_{x} = F_{A} - N = ma_{x}\]
\[ \sum F_{y} = - mg = ma_{y}\]\end{large}{latex}
Because the box is held against the wall, it has no movement (and no acceleration) in the _x_ direction (_a_~x~ = 0). Setting _a_~x~ = 0 in the _x_ direction equation gives:
{latex}\begin{large}\[ N = F_{A} = \mbox{300 N} \]\end{large}{latex}
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