Tension is the pull along a tight rope; draw a free-body diagram, write ΣF = m a, then solve for T.
Tension shows up any time a rope, string, cable, belt, or chain pulls on something. It’s easy to spot, yet easy to solve the wrong way if you skip the picture. A clean free-body diagram and a steady sign choice do most of the work.
This article walks you through a repeatable method, then applies it to the setups you’ll meet in homework, labs, and real gear: hanging masses, elevators, pulleys, inclines, and two-rope supports. You’ll see what stays the same, what changes, and where mistakes sneak in.
What Tension Force Means In Plain Terms
Tension is a pulling force carried through a connector that’s taut. The connector can pull along its own length. It can’t push in a stable way because it goes slack instead.
Two small ideas save a lot of headaches:
- Tension points along the rope. On a free-body diagram, draw the tension arrow in the rope’s direction, away from the object.
- Each object gets its own diagram. Tension in the rope is one thing; the force the rope exerts on a given mass is what you draw on that mass.
In many intro problems, you also assume a light rope and a frictionless pulley. Under that set of assumptions, the tension magnitude stays the same everywhere along one continuous rope segment.
What You Need Before You Start Solving
Before you chase equations, lock in these basics:
- Knowns: masses, angles, friction data (if any), and whether anything accelerates.
- Axis choice: pick axes that match motion. On an incline, one axis along the slope keeps the math tidy.
- Sign choice: decide what “positive” means once, then stick with it.
If the motion is unknown, guess a direction for acceleration. If your final acceleration comes out negative, your guess was flipped. Your algebra is still fine.
How To Find The Tension Force
Here’s the workflow that works across setups. Don’t rush past step 2.
Step 1: Choose The Object Or Objects You’ll Analyze
Start with one mass if you can. If two masses share a rope and move together, plan to write one equation for each mass and one shared constraint that links their accelerations.
Step 2: Draw A Free-Body Diagram That Only Shows External Forces
Draw the object as a dot or box. Add only forces acting on that object from outside:
- Weight (m g) straight down
- Normal force if there’s a surface contact
- Friction if the surface can resist sliding
- Tension along the rope direction
- Applied forces (hand pulls, motors, thrust)
Don’t draw forces the object exerts on other things. Your diagram is “forces on the object,” not “forces by the object.”
Step 3: Break Forces Into Components Along Your Axes
On flat ground, x and y axes are fine. On a slope, use:
- Parallel to the slope (along the ramp)
- Perpendicular to the slope (into or out of the ramp)
Weight splits cleanly on an incline: m g sin(θ) along the slope and m g cos(θ) perpendicular to it, with θ measured from the horizontal.
Step 4: Write Newton’s Second Law For Each Axis You Care About
Write ΣF = m a for each object. If the object has no acceleration along an axis, set a = 0 for that axis. That’s equilibrium on that axis, even if something else is accelerating along a different axis.
Step 5: Use Rope Constraints To Connect Motions
A taut, inextensible rope links how objects move. Common constraints:
- Two masses connected by one rope over one pulley often share the same acceleration magnitude.
- If one mass goes up, the other goes down for the same rope segment length.
- If a pulley system has multiple supporting segments, distance changes can split by segment count.
Constraint statements turn two separate Newton’s-law equations into a solvable system.
Step 6: Solve For Tension After You’ve Solved For Acceleration
In many setups, tension drops out cleanly once you have a. If you solve for T too early, you can trap yourself in circles.
Common Single-Mass Setups That Build Intuition
Hanging Mass At Rest
A mass hangs from a rope and doesn’t move. Forces: tension up, weight down. Choose up as positive.
ΣF = 0 → T − m g = 0 → T = m g.
Hanging Mass Accelerating Up Or Down
Same picture, but now the mass accelerates. Still choose up as positive.
ΣF = m a → T − m g = m a → T = m(g + a).
If the mass accelerates downward, a is negative in your “up is positive” choice, so T comes out below m g. That matches the feel of a “light” cable when something drops.
Elevator Problems
Elevator questions are the same as a hanging mass, just wrapped in a story. The cable tension depends on the elevator’s acceleration, not its velocity. If the elevator moves at steady speed, a = 0 and T = m g.
Two-Mass Systems With One Rope
Atwood Machine (Two Hanging Masses)
Two masses (m1, m2) hang on either side of a pulley. Assume m2 is heavier, so it accelerates down and m1 accelerates up with the same magnitude a.
Write Newton’s second law for each mass. Pick positive in the direction of each mass’s motion.
- For m2 (down positive): m2g − T = m2a
- For m1 (up positive): T − m1g = m1a
Add the equations to remove T:
(m2 − m1)g = (m1 + m2)a
a = (m2 − m1)g / (m1 + m2)
Then plug back into either equation to get tension. Using the m1 equation:
T = m1(g + a)
Block On A Table Connected To A Hanging Mass
One mass (m1) sits on a table, tied over a pulley to a hanging mass (m2). If the table is frictionless and m2 pulls down, both masses share acceleration magnitude a.
For the table block (positive toward pulley): T = m1a
For the hanging block (down positive): m2g − T = m2a
Solve the pair:
a = m2g / (m1 + m2)
T = m1a = m1m2g / (m1 + m2)
If friction exists on the table, add the friction force on m1 opposite the motion and keep going. The method stays the same; only the force list changes.
Reference Definitions That Match Standard Texts
If you want a quick cross-check on wording and diagrams, OpenStax has a clear section on tension as a pull in a connector, plus worked contexts that match most physics courses. See OpenStax “Normal, Tension, and Other Examples of Forces”.
Khan Academy also gives a clean conceptual description of tension and why ropes pull rather than push. The phrasing is student-friendly and lines up with typical free-body diagrams: Khan Academy “What Is Tension?”.
Scenario Table For Fast Setup
Use this table to map a word problem into equations without guessing. It’s meant as a “pattern picker,” not a script.
| Setup | Typical ΣF Form | Notes That Prevent Mistakes |
|---|---|---|
| Hanging mass, no motion | T − m g = 0 | T equals weight only when a = 0 |
| Hanging mass, accelerating | T − m g = m a | Pick up positive, let a carry the sign |
| Two hanging masses (Atwood) | m2g − T = m2a; T − m1g = m1a | Same |a|, opposite directions |
| Block on table + hanging mass | T = m1a; m2g − T = m2a | Add friction term on the table block if needed |
| Block on incline, tied to weight | T − m g sinθ − f = m a | Use axes along/perpendicular to the slope |
| Two ropes holding one mass | ΣFx = 0; ΣFy = 0 | Resolve each tension into x/y components |
| Object in vertical circle on string | T − m g = m v²/r (top differs) | Radial axis points to the center |
| Pulley with rope mass or pulley inertia | T1 ≠ T2 in general | Different tensions can appear across the pulley |
Finding Tension Force In Pulleys And Inclines With Friction
Many “hard” tension problems are just two easy ones glued together: one object on a surface, one object hanging, plus friction and an angle.
Block On An Incline Connected To A Hanging Mass
Let m1 sit on an incline at angle θ, connected over a pulley to hanging m2. Choose positive along the rope direction for each mass. If m2 goes down, m1 goes up the slope.
For m1 along the slope:
T − m1g sinθ − f = m1a
Perpendicular to the slope:
N − m1g cosθ = 0 → N = m1g cosθ
Pick the friction model:
- If it slides, f = μkN
- If it might be stuck, f ≤ μsN and you solve for what’s required, then compare to the max
For m2 (down positive):
m2g − T = m2a
Now you have two equations in T and a. Solve for a first, then back-solve for T. If friction is static, you may find a = 0, which means you’re solving an equilibrium tension instead.
Block Pulled Horizontally By A Rope At An Angle
A rope can pull upward and reduce the normal force, which changes friction. Let a rope pull a block of mass m at angle φ above horizontal with tension T. Resolve T into components:
- Tx = T cosφ
- Ty = T sinφ
Vertical equilibrium (if the block stays on the surface):
N + T sinφ − m g = 0 → N = m g − T sinφ
Then kinetic friction becomes f = μk(m g − T sinφ). Horizontal motion gives:
T cosφ − f = m a
That single change (N depends on T) is why angled-pull problems feel “nested.” The diagram makes it straightforward.
Two-Rope Support Problems (Angles Matter)
A classic statics setup: a weight hangs from a junction where two ropes meet at different angles. The mass is at rest, so ΣF = 0. You solve components.
Let tensions be T1 and T2, making angles θ1 and θ2 from the horizontal. With +x to the right and +y up:
- ΣFx = 0 → T2cosθ2 − T1cosθ1 = 0
- ΣFy = 0 → T1sinθ1 + T2sinθ2 − m g = 0
Solve the x-equation for one tension in terms of the other, then plug into the y-equation. If one rope is close to horizontal, its tension can spike because it must supply a big horizontal component while still helping lift the weight. That’s a common “why is the number so large?” moment.
Circular Motion: When Tension Supplies Centripetal Force
When an object moves in a circle on a string, tension often points toward the center of the circle and helps provide the centripetal acceleration. The centripetal term is m v²/r, directed inward.
Vertical circle setups change with position:
- At the bottom: T − m g = m v²/r → T = m v²/r + m g
- At the top: T + m g = m v²/r → T = m v²/r − m g
If the speed is low at the top, that last expression can go to zero. A rope can’t pull with a negative tension; it goes slack. That’s a physics check you can apply right away.
Signs, Directions, And Other Traps That Wreck Good Algebra
Most wrong tension answers come from one of these slips:
- Tension drawn the wrong way. The rope pulls the object along the rope, away from the object.
- Mixing axes mid-problem. Pick axes, stick with them, and project every force onto those axes.
- Forgetting that friction opposes relative motion. Decide which way the block would slide, then point friction opposite that.
- Assuming T = m g when something accelerates. T equals weight only when the net force is zero along that line.
- Assuming equal tensions with a massive pulley. If pulley inertia matters, tensions on the two sides can differ.
When your answer feels odd, do a fast “sense check”:
- If you remove the rope (T → 0), does the motion make sense?
- If you increase a mass, does tension rise the way your equation says?
- Do units match (newtons for force)?
Troubleshooting Table For Tension Answers
When you’re stuck, this table gives you a clean set of checks without redoing everything from scratch.
| What You See | Likely Cause | Fast Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Tension comes out negative | Chosen direction for that tension is flipped | Keep magnitude, reverse the arrow on the diagram |
| Acceleration is negative | Your guessed motion direction was wrong | Accept the sign; it tells you the true direction |
| T is bigger than m g in a “rest” setup | a was not set to zero where it should be | Set ΣF = 0 on any axis with no acceleration |
| T equals m g even though there’s motion | You used equilibrium by accident | Replace 0 with m a on the motion axis |
| Friction direction keeps changing | Motion direction not decided | Assume a direction, solve, then flip if needed |
| Two-mass system gives two different a values | Constraint not applied consistently | Set the magnitudes equal for a single rope segment |
| Numbers explode in angled two-rope support | One rope nearly horizontal | Recheck angle reference, then expect large tension |
| Equation count doesn’t match unknown count | Missing a constraint or extra unknown | Add a rope-length relation or split objects into more equations |
Worked Mini Example You Can Copy For Homework
Problem: A 4.0 kg block on a frictionless table is tied over a pulley to a 2.0 kg hanging mass. Find the rope tension.
Step 1: Define m1 = 4.0 kg (table), m2 = 2.0 kg (hanging). Choose positive toward the pulley for m1 and downward for m2.
Step 2: Free-body equations:
- Table block: T = m1a
- Hanging block: m2g − T = m2a
Step 3: Solve. Substitute T = m1a into the second equation:
m2g − m1a = m2a → m2g = (m1 + m2)a
a = m2g / (m1 + m2) = 2.0(9.8) / 6.0 ≈ 3.27 m/s²
Then T = m1a = 4.0(3.27) ≈ 13.1 N.
Sense check: T is below m2g = 19.6 N, which fits because the hanging mass accelerates down, so net force on it must be positive downward.
Wrap-Up: The Repeatable Pattern
If you want one mental script, use this: diagram first, components next, ΣF = m a per object, then rope constraint, then solve. When you do those steps in that order, tension stops feeling like a mystery number and starts feeling like a normal unknown in a system of equations.
References & Sources
- OpenStax.“Normal, Tension, and Other Examples of Forces.”Defines tension as a pull in a connector and shows standard free-body diagram use.
- Khan Academy.“What Is Tension?”Explains how tension acts in ropes and strings and how it appears in common force diagrams.