Chapter 4 Motion, Energy, and Gravity Description of Motion Mass and Weight Newton’s Law of Motion Newton’s Law of Gravity Conservation Laws.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Acceleration and Momentum
Advertisements

The Nature of Force Chapter 10 section 1.
Lesson 1 Gravity and Friction Lesson 2 Newton’s First Law
Forces and Newton’s Laws. Force A force is what we call a push, or a pull, or any action that has the ability to change motion. There are two units of.
Chapter 12- Forces Physical Science.
Chapter 5 Gravity. Describing motion Speed: Rate at which object moves example: 10 m/s Velocity: Speed and direction example: 10 m/s, due east Acceleration:
7.4 Satellite Motion Circular Motion Principles for Satellites
Gravity Microsoft clip art image.
Physics 151: Lecture 28 Today’s Agenda
Making Sense of the Universe (Chapter 4) Why does the Earth go around the Sun? Part, but not all, of Chapter 4.
Chapter 3 Forces.
What are Forces? A force is a push or a pull on an object.
Chapter 4: Newton and Universal Motion
Do Now Monday, 4/2 Take our your notebook and answer the following question: What is the difference between weight and mass? You have 4 minutes. I will.
Motion and Force Chapter Twelve: Distance, Time, and Speed Chapter Thirteen: Forces Chapter Fourteen: Force and Motion.
Physical Science Gravity. Objectives Explain that gravitational force becomes stronger as the masses increase and rapidly become weaker as the distance.
SPS8.c Relate falling objects to gravitational force.
Part 4 Newton’s Second Law of Motion Newton’s Second Law Acceleration is the rate at which your velocity (speed with direction) changes.
Chapter 3 Lesson 2.
Gravity ISCI More Free Fall Free Fall Vertical and Horizontal Components of Free Fall.
MOTION.
Describe the gravitational force Define weight and relate to the gravitational force Distinguish between weight and mass Determine the weight of objects.
Laws of Motion and Energy Chapter Seven: Gravity and Space 7.1 Gravity 7.2 The Solar System 7.3 The Sun and the Stars.
Fast Moving Projectiles: Satellites The Earth satellite is simply a projectile that falls around the Earth rather than into it.
Newton’s Laws of Motion Gravity and Motion. Gravity A force of attraction between objects that is due to their masses. A force of attraction between objects.
Gravitation. Gravitational Force and Field Newton proposed that a force of attraction exists between any two masses. This force law applies to point masses.
Units to read: 14, 15, 16, 17,18. Mass and Inertia Mass is described by the amount of matter an object contains. This is different from weight – weight.
The Nature of Force Chapter 3 section 4 What is a force Force is a push or pull. Forces are either balanced or unbalanced.
Chapter 7 Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity
Forces Chapter Force and Acceleration The acceleration experienced by an object is directly proportional to the force exerted on it. The acceleration.
SACE Stage 1 Conceptual Physics 3. Newton’s First Law of Motion - Inertia.
Forces Gravity and Newton's 2nd Law. Mass = how much matter is in an object More mass = greater inertia (harder to move or stop)
Part 1 Gravity and Free Fall Free Fall An object is in free fall if it is accelerating due to the force of gravity and no other forces are acting on.
Objectives  Describe how the weight and the mass of an object are related.  Differentiate between actual weight and apparent weight.
Dynamics: Newton’s Laws of Motion
Gravity and Motion. Gravity is what gives the universe its _________ A universal force that acts on _________ the objects in the universe Every particle.
< BackNext >PreviewMain Chapter 13 Forces and Motion Preview Section 1 Gravity: A Force of AttractionGravity: A Force of Attraction Section 2 Gravity and.
The First Two Laws of Motion
Forces Chapter 3. Section 2: Gravity What you will learn: 1. Describe the gravitational force. 2. Distinguish between mass and weight. 3. Explain why.
Chapter 3 - Forces. Section 1 – Newton’s 2 nd Law Objects accelerate in the direction of the net force.
4.3 Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation p. 140 From Kepler to Newton Newton used Kepler’s Laws to derive a law describing the nature of the gravitational.
A100 Movie Special Tuesday, March 23 Swain West 119 7:00 pm (153 minutes) Winner of several awards 20 activity points! BYOP (Bring Your Own Popcorn)
Forces and Motion Physical Science, Physics in the Workplace Anne Rettig, Instructor.
Section 2: Weight and Drag Force
Section 2Forces Section 2: Gravity Preview Key Ideas Bellringer Weight and Mass Law of Universal Gravitation Free Fall Projectile Motion.
Chapter 3 Forces. Section 3.1: Newton’s 2 nd Law  2 nd Law of Motion: describes how force, mass, and acceleration are related Formula: force = mass x.
Introductory Physics. How we describe motion Speed – how fast something is moving Velocity – speed and direction Acceleration – change in velocity Acceleration.
Physical Science Chapter Four Acceleration Momentum Newton Gravity Free Fall Air Resistance.
Basic Mechanics. Units Velocity and Acceleration Speed: Time rate of change of position. Velocity: Speed in a specific direction. Velocity is specified.
Section 2Forces EQ: 〉 What is the relationship between free-fall acceleration and mass?
Chapter: The Laws of Motion
Forces and Newton’s Laws
Chapter 12 Section 2 Gravity Objectives
Section 3: Using Newton’s Laws
Mass vs Weight.
Chapter 12: ALL ABOUT MOTION
Chapter 11 Section 2.
Unit 7 Lesson 2. Gravity: A Force of Attraction A
Section 3: Using Newton’s Laws
Motion and Forces.
Chapter 13 Preview Section 1 Gravity: A Force of Attraction
Chapter 2 Astronomy.
Laws of Motion and Energy
Motion and Forces.
Chapter 2 - Forces 2.1 The Nature of Force.
Section 2: Gravity Preview Key Ideas Bellringer Weight and Mass
Chapter 3 Forces.
Dynamics: Newton’s Laws of Motion
Section 2: Gravity Preview Key Ideas Bellringer Weight and Mass
Section 2: Gravity Preview Key Ideas Bellringer Weight and Mass
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 4 Motion, Energy, and Gravity Description of Motion Mass and Weight Newton’s Law of Motion Newton’s Law of Gravity Conservation Laws

Preface So far we have only used our knowledge on how the celestial bodies are moving in the universe and with respect to each other to explain what we see in our sky. We have not discussed the reasons of why the celestial bodies move the way they do. For example, Why do the planets orbit the Sun in elliptical orbits, What is keeping the planets from running away from the Sun? O r, Why does the Moon revolve around the Earth while the Earth-Moon system revolves around the Sun… Newton’s Laws of Motion and Laws of Gravity explains why the celestial bodies move the way they do…and many more things…

Physical Concepts These are the physical concepts that will be introduced in this chapter… These concepts are necessary for the understanding of the motion of celestial bodies. Motion  Linear motion: speed, velocity, and acceleration  Angular motion: angular speed, angular velocity, and angular acceleration Mass − Mass − Weight Force and torque Momentum − Linear momentum − Angular momentum Energy – different form of energy Conservation Laws − Conservation of energy − Conservation of momentum

Description of Motion When we talk about motion, we need to talk about Position: the position of an object with respect to a reference point. –We specify position in length units, such as [meter], [foot], [kilo- meter], [light-year], etc. Velocity: change in position with respect to a reference point in a given amount of time. –Velocity is specified in unit of length divided by time, e.g., [meter/second], [kilo-meter/hour], etc. –How fast –Direction Acceleration: change in velocity with respect to a reference point in a given amount of time. –Acceleration is specified in unit of velocity divided by time, e.g., [meter/second 2 ], [km/s 2 ]. –Change in speed –Change in direction.

Description of Motion Depending on which description is more convenient for the problem at hand, we can describe motion in terms of Linear motion –when we are describing motion along a straight line, or, Angular motion –When we talk about motions along a curved path, such as the rotation of one object around another.

Angular Motion The motion of a moving object that is changing its direction is described by angular motion.  An object moving on a circle with fixed rotation rate has constant angular velocity (constant degree/sec and direction of rotation).  An object moving on a circle with fixed rotation rate has non-zero acceleration. It is changing its direction all the time. The orbital motion of the Earth around the Sun is an example of angular motion… the direction of Earth’s orbital motion is changing constantly (it reverses direction every 6 months), its angular velocity (w.r.t. to the Sun) is about 360 degrees/365 days, or about 1 degree/day.

Constant Speed Motion on a Perfect Circle Motion of an object in a circular orbit can be described in x-y coordinate system. V1V1 V2V2 V2V2 V1V1 Or, in angular coordinate system. X Y

Examples of Acceleration Acceleration is not just speeding up or slowing down. When you are changing direction, you have acceleration also! Acceleration: speeding up Deceleration: slowing down, negative acceleration.

Linear Acceleration  An object moving along a straight line with constant speed has constant velocity and zero acceleration  A car that can go from 0 to 60 km/hour (1 km/minute) in 1 minute has a linear acceleration of 1 km/minute 2  An object falling off the roof (on Earth) experiences a constant linear acceleration downward (g = 9.8 m/sec 2 ). This is how strong the Earth’s gravitational force is at the surface of the Earth.

Angular Acceleration Motion of an object in a circular orbit has constant speed in radial direction But its direction changes all the time… –Therefore, it has non- zero acceleration. V1V1 V2V2 X Y V2V2 V1V1

Mass When we talk about motion, another important ingredient is the property of the object in motion: its mass –Mass is an intrinsic property of matter, which determines how fast an object can respond to force. –Your mass is never zero, unless you don’t exist. Or you are not matter, but energy, such as light (photons). –Your mass is the same whether your are on Earth, on the Moon, or during space walk (weight-less environment).

Weight and Mass In daily life, we usually think of mass as something we can measure with a bathroom scale, but technically, the scale measures the weight of an object, not the mass. The distinction between weight and mass rarely matters when we are talking about objects on Earth, but it is very important in physics and astronomy… Mass is the amount of matter in your body. Weight is the force that’s acting on your mass.  Your weight depends on your mass AND the force that is acting on you.  When you measure your weight, you actually measure the force acting on you, not just the mass.  On the surface of Earth, the force that is acting on you is the gravitational force of the Earth.  You weigh more on Earth than on the Moon, because the gravitational force of the Earth is stronger than that on the Moon.  Your are not weightless when you are in free-fall, like when you are doing space walk. You feel weightless because you cannot feel the gravitational force acting on you. Click here to start animation…

Measuring Weight in an Elevator When you stand on a scale, you are exerting a force (the gravitational force pulling on you) on the scale (or the scale is exerting a force on you). This force is your weight. When the elevator is not accelerating up or down (when its stopped or moving up or down at a constant speed), it exerts a force on you that is exactly equal to the gravitational force. So, your weight does not change. When the elevator is accelerating up (or down), it exerts more (or less) force on you. The net force on you changes. Therefore, your weight changes.

Free Fall Orbital motion can be considered as a free-fall also… –If you step off a tall tower, you will land at a point directly underneath. While you are falling, you will feel weightless, just like when you are orbiting the Earth in space. –If you run and jump off the tower, then you land a point away from the base of the tower. –If you launch yourself on a rocket horizontally, with just the right speed, you will be free-falling forever: you are in orbit!

Question Technically, the reading off the spring scales should be in unit of force (such as Newton, or kg × m × sec -2 ), not mass. However, because we know how strong the gravitational acceleration is on the surface of Earth, we had taken care to calibrate our scales and we show our weight in mass unit (like kilo-gram or pound). We also know that the gravitational acceleration on the surface of the Moon is only about 1/6 of Earth’s. Can you take our bathroom spring scales to the Moon and measure how much you weigh? a.Yes. b.No.  Answer

Question Technically, the reading off the spring scales should be in unit of force (such as Newton, or kg × cm × sec -2 ), not mass. However, because we know how strong the gravitational acceleration is on the surface of Earth, we had taken care to calibrate our scales and we show our weight in mass unit (like kilo-gram or pound). We also know that the gravitational acceleration on the surface of the Moon is only about 1/6 of Earth’s. If you weigh 50 kg (kilo-gram) on Earth, what would your bathroom spring scale read on the Moon? ~8 kg

Question Technically, the reading off the spring scales should be in unit of force (such as Newton, or kg × cm × sec -2 ), not mass. However, because we know how strong the gravitational acceleration is on the surface of Earth, we had taken care to calibrate our scales and we show our weight in mass unit (like kilo-gram or pound). We also know that the gravitational acceleration on the surface of the Moon is only about 1/6 of Earth’s. What do you do to make the bathroom spring scale give correct mass on the Moon? a.Divide the reading by 6. b.Multiply the reading by 6. c.Divide the reading by 9.8 d.Multiple the reading by 9.8  Answer

Question Technically, the reading off the spring scales should be in unit of force (such as Newton, or kg × cm × sec -2 ), not mass. However, because we know how strong the gravitational acceleration is on the surface of Earth, we had taken care to calibrate our scales and we show our weight in mass unit (like kilo-gram or pound). We also know that the gravitational acceleration on the surface of the Moon is only about 1/6 of Earth’s. Can you take a balance scale to the Moon and measure how much you weigh? a.Yes. b.No.  Answer

Question Technically, the reading off the spring scales should be in unit of force (such as Newton, or kg × cm × sec -2 ), not mass. However, because we know how strong the gravitational acceleration is on the surface of Earth, we had taken care to calibrate our scales and we show our weight in mass unit (like kilo-gram or pound). We also know that the gravitational acceleration on the surface of the Moon is only about 1/6 of Earth’s. Can you take our bathroom spring scales to the Moon and measure how much you weigh? a.Yes. If you understand physics… b.No. If you don’t understand the difference between mass and weight.  Back r

Question Technically, the reading off the spring scales should be in unit of force (such as Newton, or kg × cm × sec -2 ), not mass. However, because we know how strong the gravitational acceleration is on the surface of Earth, we had taken care to calibrate our scales and we show our weight in mass unit (like kilo-gram or pound). We also know that the gravitational acceleration on the surface of the Moon is only about 1/6 of Earth’s. What do you do to make the bathroom spring scale give correct mass on the Moon? a.Divide the reading by 6. b.Multiply the reading by 6. c.Divide the reading by 9.8 d.Multiple the reading by 9.8  Back

Technically, the reading off the spring scales should be in unit of force (such as Newton, or kg × cm × sec -2 ), not mass. However, because we know how strong the gravitational acceleration is on the surface of Earth, we had taken care to calibrate our scales and we show our weight in mass unit (like kilo-gram or pound). We also know that the gravitational acceleration on the surface of the Moon is only about 1/6 of Earth’s. Can you take a balance scale to the Moon and measure how much you weigh? a.Yes. b.No.  Back Question As long as you have the standard weights (mass really) with you!