@
anonymoushehe
Yes there are two cases for the normal force.
The problem here is you haven't told us
what is the motion of the object on the inclined plane. I agree with
liamkk112 that you should discard those green vectors, they are distracting you from a proper understanding the free-body diagram and the motion of the object.
Case 1. When the object is static on the inclined plane, the normal force is just F
N=mg.cosθ
If there was zero friction, the object would slide down the inclined plane under the influence of the resultant vector R as shown below.
View attachment 46074
Case 2. When the object is dynamic on the inclined plane, e.g. a car executing uniform circular motion around a banked track, then the normal force is greater.
This is a real effect. Watch a
NASCAR race. As the race cars enter a banked curve at high speed, the car body gets closer to the track, the suspension gets lower because there is more normal force on the suspension springs. The car sits lower on the track. Why? Because the force vectors on the car have increased. The driver inside the car also feels these increased downward forces as he enters the curve. As a Physics student, I hope you can identify that it is in fact the driver's inertia that creates the impression on the driver of more downwards force, because he is now in an accelerating frame of reference.
The horizontal component of the normal force now provides a centripetal force R towards the centre of curvature of the track. If the speed of the car is optimum, the motion of the car does not slide down the inclined plane, it stays put on the inclined plane and the car executes UCM.
If the car enters into the curve
too fast the resultant vector R is insufficient to accelerate the car towards the centre, and the car drifts up the banking thus increasing the radius of curvature of its path.
If the car enters the curve
too slow the resultant vector is more than is required and the car drifts down the banking, thus decreasing the radius of curvature of its path.
So in summary, yes there are two cases for the normal force vector. Does that make sense?