1660 Views

resultant of of two forces one of which is double the others is 260 n if the direction of the large force is Reverse and the other remains an alter the resultant reduce to 180 n determine the magnitude of forces and angle between the forces


Recommended : Get important details about Government College of Engineering, Jalgaon. Download Brochure
landgeaditya86 5th Feb, 2021
Answer (1)
Ayush 17th Mar, 2021

Hello candidate,

Force is a vector quantity because it has both magnitude as well as a specific direction for motion. Hence, in order to find the resultant force acting we need to go for the vector method of addition.

The angle between the two forces is 180 degree, and one of the two force is double the other, and the resultant magnitude of force is given as 260 N, so one of the force is 260 Newton and the other force is 520 Newton.

Hope it was informational!!

Compare Colleges

College Comparison based on Courses, Placement, Rank, Fee

Compare Now

Know More About

Related Questions

Amity University-Noida B.Tech...
Apply
Among top 100 Universities Globally in the Times Higher Education (THE) Interdisciplinary Science Rankings 2026
Amity University-Noida MCA Ad...
Apply
Among top 100 Universities Globally in the Times Higher Education (THE) Interdisciplinary Science Rankings 2026
Amity University-Noida M.Tech...
Apply
Among top 100 Universities Globally in the Times Higher Education (THE) Interdisciplinary Science Rankings 2026
UPES B.Tech Admissions 2026
Apply
Ranked #43 among Engineering colleges in India by NIRF | Highest Package 1.3 CR , 100% Placements
UPES Dehradun BCA Admissions ...
Apply
Ranked #45 Among Universities in India by NIRF | 1950+ Students Placed, 91% Placement, 800+ Recruiters
UPES M.Tech Admissions 2026
Apply
Ranked #45 Among Universities in India by NIRF | 1950+ Students Placed 91% Placement, 800+ Recruiters
View All Application Forms

Download the Careers360 App on your Android phone

Regular exam updates, QnA, Predictors, College Applications & E-books now on your Mobile

150M+ Students
30,000+ Colleges
500+ Exams
1500+ E-books