Masses on a turntable

With a turntable spinning slowly, and two masses rotating with the turntable, what does the free-body diagram of each mass look like?

The only vertical forces are the normal force and the force of gravity, and these must balance. N = mg.

The only horizontal force is friction. If we turned friction off while the turntable was spinning the masses would go in a straight line, which would carry them away from the center of the turntable. Friction opposes this motion, so it points toward the center of the turntable. With the masses initially not slipping on the turntable (no relative motion) this is the static force of friction.

Apply Newton's second law in the x direction, with x horizontal and +x toward the center of the turntable:
ΣFx = max =
m v2
r
fs =
m v2
r

Note that as the speed of the masses increases the force of static friction increases. Once fs reaches its maximum value the masses will begin to slide. The maximum fs is the same for the two masses, but does one mass reach this maximum value before the other?

Each mass has a different speed, but the masses have the same angular velocity. Remember that v = ω r. The equation for fs can then be written as:

fs = mω 2r

Because fs is proportional to r, the force of static friction for the outer mass is larger than that for the inner mass. The outer mass will reach the maximum value of fs first, so it will slide off the turntable first.