Which Way Does Friction Point on a Box in a Moving Truck?
Friction: A Box on an Accelerating Truck
ma 0.0 N
ON BOX 0.0 N
fₛ,ₘₐₓ = μₛFₙ 50.0 N
ACCELERATION 0.00 m/s²
Friction Simulation: When Friction Drives Motion
Most students learn that friction opposes motion — yet a box riding on a truck bed is pushed forward by friction. This interactive AP Physics 1 simulation resolves the paradox: static friction opposes relative slipping, not motion itself, so it points in the direction of the truck's acceleration — forward when speeding up, backward when braking, and zero at constant velocity.
Drag the acceleration slider and watch the free-body diagram, the friction-vs-acceleration graph, and the velocity-time curves respond in real time. Push past aₘₐₓ = μₛg and the box breaks loose: kinetic friction (μₖFₙ) takes over, the box slides across the bed, and the velocity curves peel apart until it strikes the wall. Change the mass and discover the classic surprise — the slipping threshold doesn't move, because mass cancels out of ma = μₛmg.
Concepts covered: Newton's first and second laws, static vs kinetic friction, μₛ vs μₖ, free-body diagrams, and velocity-time graph analysis.
On a box riding in an accelerating truck, static friction points in the direction of the truck's acceleration — forward when speeding up, backward when braking, and zero at constant velocity. The box slips when the acceleration exceeds aₘₐₓ = μₛg.
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