Difficulty: Easy
Correct Answer: do not meet
Explanation:
Introduction / Context:
Classifying systems of forces guides the choice of equilibrium equations and solution strategy. “Coplanar” refers to forces whose lines of action lie in a single plane; “concurrent” refers to whether those lines intersect at a common point.
Given Data / Assumptions:
Concept / Approach:
Coplanar concurrent forces meet at a single point. Coplanar non-concurrent forces do not all intersect at one point; they may be parallel, form a general 2D system, or intersect pairwise at different points. Such systems typically require both ΣF = 0 components and ΣM = 0 to solve.
Step-by-Step Reasoning:
Verification / Alternative check:
Examples include a beam with multiple non-collinear loads and reactions. Not all lines of action intersect at one point, yet all lie in the beam’s plane.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
“Meet” defines concurrent forces; “Must be parallel only” is too restrictive (non-concurrent sets can be non-parallel); “Equal and opposite” would be a special case forming a couple.
Common Pitfalls:
Confusing “non-concurrent” with “parallel”; assuming coplanar automatically implies concurrency.
Final Answer:
do not meet.
Discussion & Comments