Weight of a Person Riding in an Elevator

​
acceleration of the elevator m/
2
s
5
mass of the elevator rider kg
80
apparent weight (in newtons):
If you stand on a scale in an elevator accelerating upward, you feel heavier because the elevator's floor presses harder on your feet, and the scale will show a higher reading than when the elevator is at rest. On the other hand, when the elevator accelerates downward, you feel lighter. The force exerted by the scale is known as apparent weight; it does not change with constant speed.

Details

Applying Newton's second law, the equation to link acceleration and net force is
F
g
+
F
scale
=
F
net
, where
F
g
is your weight,
F
scale
is your weight measured on the scale (the usual force), and
F
net
is the net force.
Snapshot 1: the elevator accelerates upward; you feel heavier
Snapshot 2: the elevator is at rest; the scale shows your actual weight
Snapshot 3: the acceleration of the elevator is downward and equal to the acceleration due to gravity; you and the elevator can be considered to be in free fall, because the scale does not exert any force

External Links

Force (ScienceWorld)
Mass (ScienceWorld)
Newton's Second Law (ScienceWorld)
Normal Force (ScienceWorld)
Weight (ScienceWorld)

Permanent Citation

Enrique Zeleny
​
​"Weight of a Person Riding in an Elevator"​
​http://demonstrations.wolfram.com/WeightOfAPersonRidingInAnElevator/​
​Wolfram Demonstrations Project​
​Published: March 7, 2011