Forces and Newton’s First Law of Motion 8SCIENCE.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
- Newton’s First and Second Laws - Gravity 3 - Newton’s Third Law
Advertisements

Newton’s FIRST Law Of Motion.
Chapter 13 Physical Science.
Your science book sits on the table until you pick it up. If you hold your book above the ground, then let go, gravity pulls it to the floor. An object.
Chapter 2: Forces 2.1: Forces change motion.
The Nature of Force Chapter 10 section 1.
Forces Change Motion Force- push or a pull
Newton ’ s First Law Law of Inertia. What You Will Learn ► Distinguish between balanced and net forces ► Describe Newton ’ s First Law of motion ► Explain.
Balanced and Unbalanced Forces Velocity and Acceleration Force and Motion.
Forces & Motion Unit Vocabulary
Newton’s 1st Law.
Newton’s First Law. An object at rest _____________, And an object in motion ___________________, Until acted on by ______________.
Claim these words! balanced, unbalanced, and net force gravity force inertia friction motion velocity and speed acceleration Newton’s Laws of.
Consider a ball at rest in the middle of a wagon
Friction Two or more objects in contact moving past each other will slow each other down. The force which causes them to slow down is friction. Friction:
Forces Unit 1 Lesson 3. FORCES Force = push or pull Force has size and direction Force is labeled in Newtons (N). Forces must act on an object Forces.
12.1 Forces Objectives: M 4-1 Describe examples of force and identify appropriate SI units used to measure force. 10 M 4-2 Explain how the motion of an.
Forces.
Notes: Newton’s 1 st Law 16 Dec EQ: How are force and motion related?
Motion.  Motion is a change in position Frame of Reference  A place or object that is fixed (not moving)  Ex: A bus is driving by.  Your reference.
Newton’s First Law Chapter 13 section1
Newton’s 1 st Law Inertia. Force  Any push or pull acting on an object  Most forces require contact between two objects (Contact Forces) Ex. Motor lifts.
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 12: Forces and Motion
FORCES. Force  any push or pull  Example: opening a door  Pushing something across the floor.
Forces and Newton’s Laws
Newton’s Laws Conceptual Questions Discuss the answers as a group and have someone record your answer on a piece of paper. Include all your names on it.
WELCOME BACK MINIONS! Time to learn the Law!!!. NEWTON’S 1 ST LAW OF MOTION Newton’s First Law of Motion An object at rest will remain at rest unless.
Unit Two: Dynamics Section 2: Newton’s First Law of Inertia.
Chapter: Force and Newton’s Laws
Newton’s Laws of Motion Sir Isaac Newton ( )
Wile E. Coyote If Wile E. Coyote and a bolder fall off a cliff at the same time which do you think will hit the ground first?
Chapter 6 Forces in Motion.
WHAT IS A FORCE????? PUSH A force is a push….. PULL … or a pull.
Newton’s Second Law: Force and Acceleration
Section 2: Newton’s First Law of Inertia
SECTION 2 (PART 2) - Projectile Motion and Centripetal Force.
Guided Discussion Student notes are shown in blue.
1.4 Forces change motion.
FORCES AND MOTION. FORCE A force is any push or pull from one object to another.
Balanced and Unbalanced Forces Velocity and Acceleration
Guided Discussion Student notes are shown in blue.
Force and Newton’s Laws. Section 1 ndtime/newtonslawsofmotion/
A. Motion is when an object changes its position relative to a reference point ( an object or place is used to determine if an object changes position).
Forces in Motion Chapter 2 Mrs. Estevez. Gravity and Motion What happens when you drop a baseball and a marble at the same time? What happens when you.
Chapter 5: “Frictional Forces” Create by G. Frega.
Newton’s First Law of Motion
The Nature of Force and Motion 1.Force – A push or a pull – How strong it is and in what direction? 2.Net Force – The sum of all forces acting on an object.
Forces Vocab My Favorite Forces May the Force be with you Forces? No, motion! No… ??? Speed and Velocity
Newton’s First Law Newton’s First Law: states that if the net force acting on an object is zero, the object will remain at rest or move in a straight line.
Forces FORCEMAN.
Newton’s First Law of Motion
NEWTON’S 2nd LAW.
2.2: Inertia & Newton’s First Law
Forces FORCEMAN.
Newton’s FIRST Law Of Motion.
Forces and Newton’s Laws
Forces.
Section 2.1 Forces change motion
What is a force?????.
Chapter 2 Forces in Motion
Forces.
What is Newton’s First Law of Motion?
Newton’s First Law of Motion: Demonstrations
Inertia - Newton’s First Law
Forces.
Chapter Menu Lesson 1: Combining Forces Lesson 2: Types of Force
Chapter 11 Section 1.
Forces Review 8th Grade Science.
Presentation transcript:

Forces and Newton’s First Law of Motion 8SCIENCE

What is a force? What happens to an object as it accelerates? – Speeds up, slows down or turns – There must be some force making it act this way A force is a push or a pull – Examples? – Ex: when you throw a ball, force from your hand moves the ball forward – When the ball hits the ground, the ground produces a force to stop the ball, maybe making it bounce back up Net force is the total force felt by an object – Ex: paper clip held close to a magnet has the force of gravity, and the magnet’s force being exerted on it

Forces Balanced forces cancel each other out – Net force = 0 – Do not cause a change in an object’s motion Unbalanced forces – Net force is not 0 – The object will accelerate – Ex: friction is an unbalanced force Friction is a rubbing force that acts against the direction of motion – Makes objects slow down/stop

Newton’s First Law of Motion Newton’s first law of motion states: – An object will remain at rest or move with constant velocity until it is acted upon by a net force What other term related to motion have we learned that sounds like this? – INERTIA! This is also called Newton’s law of inertia Ex: driving in a car and you are drinking a liquid – The car, yourself and the drink are all travelling at the same speed – If the car suddenly stops you will keep moving, as well as your drink and it will spill

Friction activity What do you observe in these examples with FRICTION? Please write your observations in your SCIENCE JOURNAL and answer the following question for EACH CHALLENGE: a. Which challenge was the most difficult? Easiest? Why do you think so? Explain. 1)Challenge: to drop the coin and the slip of paper from the same height, at the same time, and have the paper and coin reach the ground at the same time - Take a small piece of paper and make sure it is slightly smaller than the coin - Try and make sure there is as much contact as possible between the coin and paper 2) Challenge: make a card fall perfectly straight. - Drop a playing card with the thin edge downwards (vertical – up and down) - Now try holding the card flat and try to drop it so it moves perfectly straight

Inertia activity What do you observe in these examples with inertia? Please write your observations in your SCIENCE JOURNAL and answer the following question for EACH CHALLENGE: a. Which challenge was the most difficult? Easiest? Why do you think so? Explain. 1)Challenge: Place a card across the top of a cup and place a coin in the middle of the card. Get the coin to drop into the cup by ‘flicking’ the edge of the card in a horizontal direction (side to side) with your index finger. 2)Challenge: Place a card across the top of a cup and place a paper clip on the top of the glass. Repeat step 1 by trying to flick the card so the paper clip goes into the cup. 3)Challenge: Lay a strip of paper over the edge of the cup. Put a coin on the paper strip so that it is balanced on the edge of the cup. Hold the strip of paper with one hand and WITHOUT BREAKING THE PAPER, quickly ‘karate chop’ the strip so it moves out from under the coin but the coin remains balanced.