I have a cart with another cart on top which gets pulled down by another cart on the side. There is no friction.
The question is:
How strongly do I have to push with $F$ to keep the cart $m_1$ stable?
http://wstaw.org/m/2012/02/04/m62.png
I work in the system of the cart $m_3$. This system accelerates with some $a$. The force of inertia pulls back on $m_1$ with $m_1 a$. That is opposed by the gravitational force of $m_2$, which is simply $m_2 g$.
The acceleration that I need for this to be stable is:
$$ a = \frac{m_2}{m_1} g $$
Here comes the point I am not too sure about:
The force is on $m_3$ and on $m_2$, so the driving force would be this:
$$ F = (m_2 + m_3) \frac{m_2}{m_1} g $$
On second thought, I think also need to accelerate $m_1$ some way or another, so that my total force would be a little higher:
$$ F = (m_1 + m_2 + m_3) \frac{m_2}{m_1} g $$
I prefer the latter, but what is the right solution?