Newton’s First & Second Law AP Physics C. Unit is the Newton(N) or pound (lb) Is by definition a ….. push or a pull Can exist during physical contact.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Newton’s First & Second Law
Advertisements

FORCE A force is any influence that can change the velocity of a body. Forces can act either through the physical contact of two objects (contact forces:
Dr. Steve Peterson Physics 1025F Mechanics NEWTON’S LAWS Dr. Steve Peterson
Newton’s Laws.
Newton’s Laws of Motion. HFinks '072 6/2/2015 Basic Concepts  Force – push or pull on an object - Vector quantity  Mass – amount of matter in a body.
Forces and Newton’s Laws of Motion
Motion & Force: Dynamics Physics 11. Galileo’s Inertia  Galileo attempted to explain inertia based upon rolling a ball down a ramp  Predict what would.
Chapter 4 Forces and the Laws of Motion. Chapter Objectives Define force Identify different classes of forces Free Body Diagrams Newton’s Laws of Motion.
Kinematics – the study of how things move Dynamics – the study of why things move Forces (the push or pull on an object) cause things to move Aristotle.
Newton’s Laws - continued
College Physics, 7th Edition
Newton’s Laws.
Forces Contact Forces - those resulting from physical contact between objects –Normal Force –Friction –Tension (spring/rope) –Compression Action at a Distance.
Force A push or pull exerted on an object..
Newton’s Laws and Dynamics
CHAPTER 4 The Laws of Motion Newton’s First Law: Newton’s First Law: An object at rest remains at rest and an object in motion continues in motion with.
Newton’s Laws - continued Friction, Inclined Planes, N.T.L., Law of Gravitation.
SECOND LAW OF MOTION If there is a net force acting on an object, the object will have an acceleration and the object’s velocity will change. Newton's.
Dynamics of force and motion
Forces ¿ Qué es un Force? A push or a pull. The Four Fundamental Forces 1.Gravitational 2.Electromagnetic 3.Strong Nuclear 4.Weak Nuclear.
F = ma “The Force” “An energy field created by all living things. It surrounds us, penetrates us, and binds the galaxy together.” “An energy field created.
Forces and Newton’s Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Arrows are used to represent forces. The length of.
Newton’s Laws of Motion What are forces? How can diagrams be used to depict and analyze the forces acting on an object? What are the effects of net force.
PAP Physics. Unit is the NEWTON(N) Is by definition a push or a pull Can exist during physical contact (Tension, Friction, Applied Force) Can exist with.
Newton’s First Law Level 1 Physics.
 Isaac Newton  Smart Guy  Liked Apples  Invented Calculus  Came up with 3 laws of motion  Named stuff after himself.
Newton’s Second Law Honors Physics. N.S.L. "The acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the NET FORCE AND inversely proportional to the.
Newton’s First Law Honors Physics. Net force – combination of all forces acting on an object. (F net ) Balanced forces – forces that are equal in magnitude.
Chapter 4 Forces and Newton’s Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact.
Force & Newton’s Laws of Motion. FORCE Act of pulling or pushing Act of pulling or pushing Vector quantity that causes an acceleration when unbalanced.
Kinematics. The 3 Kinematic equations There are 3 major kinematic equations than can be used to describe the motion in DETAIL. All are used when the acceleration.
Physics 111: Mechanics Lecture 4
Force Diagrams And Types of Forces. Review Force = push or pull. Measured in Newtons. –1 lb = 4.45 N F net = ma a = F net / m Big force = big acceleration.
Free Body diagrams and problem solving
More Fun with Newton’s Laws Friction, Inclined Planes, N.T.L.
Friction. Biblical Reference And they pulled him up with the ropes and lifted him out of the cistern. Jeremiah 38:13.
AP Physics 1 – DYNAMICS OF FORCE AND MOTION NEWTON’S THIRD LAW & MORE FRICTION! (IT’S BACK!)
Forces and the Laws of Motion
Newton’s First & Second Law AP Physics C. Unit is the NEWTON(N) Is by definition a push or a pull Can exist during physical contact(Tension, Friction,
Forces In One Dimension
Forces and Newton’s Laws of Motion. A force is a push or a pull. Arrows are used to represent forces. The length of the arrow is proportional to the magnitude.
Unit is the NEWTON(N) Is by definition a push or a pull Can exist during physical contact(Tension, Friction, Applied Force) Can exist with NO physical.
Newton’s First & Second Law
General Physics 101 PHYS Dr. Zyad Ahmed Tawfik
Forces, Newton’s First & Second Laws AP Physics 1.
Newton’s Laws.
Newton’s Laws.
Newton’s Laws.
Newton’s First Law Pre-AP Physics.
Newton’s Laws.
Newton’s Laws.
Chapter 4 Newton’s Laws.
Newton’s First & Second Law
Forces and Newton’s Laws of Motion
Newton’s Laws.
Unit is the NEWTON(N) Is by definition a push or a pull Can exist during physical contact(Tension, Friction, Applied Force) Can exist with NO physical.
Unit is the NEWTON(N) Is by definition a push or a pull Can exist during physical contact(Tension, Friction, Applied Force) Can exist with NO physical.
Newton’s First & Second Law
Newton’s Laws.
Newton’s First & Second Law
Newton’s First & Second Law
Physics Newton’s First Law.
Newton’s Laws.
Newton’s Laws.
Newton’s First & Second Law
Newton’s Laws.
Presentation transcript:

Newton’s First & Second Law AP Physics C

Unit is the Newton(N) or pound (lb) Is by definition a ….. push or a pull Can exist during physical contact (Tension, Friction, Applied Force) Can exist with NO physical contact called Fundamental Forces (gravitational, electric, nuclear FIELDS)

INERTIA – the more of it you have, the harder it is to get you moving. Modern definition: a quantity of matter, also called … MASS. Unit for MASS = kilogram. NOTE: MASS and WEIGHT are NOT the same thing. MASS never changes when an object moves to a different planet. Weight is a force due to Gravity. It is how your MASS is effected by gravity. What is the weight of an 85.3-kg person on earth? On Mars=3.2 m/s/s)? Inerte in Galileo’s Italian meant “lazy”

An object in motion remains in motion in a straight line and at a constant speed OR an object at rest remains at rest, UNLESS acted upon by an EXTERNAL (unbalanced) force. The bottom line: There is NO ACCELERATION (no change in velocity) unless a force acts, but you can have MOTION even if there is NO force acting. “Common sense” told us the opposite for generations, so inertia was a real intellectual breakthrough. EQUILIBRIUM is when there are either NO FORCES acting or those that are acting all cancel each other out.

A pictorial representation of forces complete with labels. W 1,Fg 1 or m 1 g Weight(mg) – Always drawn from the center, straight down Force Normal(F N ) – A surface force always drawn perpendicular to a surface. Tension(T or F T ) – force in ropes and always drawn AWAY from object. Friction(Ff)- Always drawn opposing the motion. m2gm2g T T FNFN FfFf It helps if you first circle the object you are analyzing, and labe only the forces acting ON IT. Other than gravity, these forces must involve physical contact.

mg FNFN FfFf

Since the F net = 0, a system moving at a constant speed or at rest MUST be at EQUILIBRIUM. TIPS for solving problems Draw a FBD Resolve anything at angles into COMPONENTS Write equations of equilibrium Solve for unknowns

A 10-kg box is being pulled across the table to the right at a constant speed with a force of 50N. a) Calculate the Force of Friction b) Calculate the Force Normal mg FNFN FaFa FfFf

Suppose the same box is now pulled at an angle of 30 degrees above the horizontal. a) Calculate the Force of Friction b) Calculate the Force Normal mg FNFN FaFa FfFf 30 F ax F ay

If an object is NOT at rest or moving at a constant speed, that means the FORCES are UNBALANCED. One force(s) in a certain direction overpowers the others. THEN THE OBJECT WILL….. ACCELERATE.

The acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the NET FORCE and inversely proportional to the mass. Tips: Draw an FBD Resolve vectors into components Write equations of motion by adding and subtracting vectors to find the NET FORCE. Always write larger force – smaller force. Solve for any unknowns

A 10-kg box is being pulled across the table to the right by a rope with an applied force of 50N. Calculate the acceleration of the box if a 12 N frictional force acts upon it. mg FNFN FaFa FfFf In which direction, is this object accelerating? The X direction! So N.S.L. is worked out using the forces in the “x” direction only

m1gm1g m2gm2g T T FNFN A mass, m 1 = 3.00kg, is resting on a frictionless horizontal table is connected to a cable that passes over a pulley and then is fastened to a hanging mass, m 2 = 11.0 kg as shown below. Find the acceleration of each mass and the tension in the cable.

Where does the calculus fit in? First derivative Second derivative DON’T WORRY ABOUT THE STUFF ON THIS SLIDE OR THE NEXT FOR NOW.

Where does the calculus fit in? There could be situations where you are given a displacement function or velocity function. The derivative will need to be taken once or twice in order to get the acceleration. Here is an example. You are standing on a bathroom scale in an elevator in a tall building. Your mass is 72-kg. The elevator starts from rest and travels upward with a speed that varies with time according to: When t = 4.0s, what is the reading on the bathroom scale (a.k.a. Force Normal)? 4.6 m/s/s N DON’T WORRY ABOUT THE STUFF ON THIS SLIDE UNTIL NOVEMBER

m1gm1g m2gm2g T T FNFN A mass, m 1 = 3.00kg, is resting on a frictionless horizontal table is connected to a cable that passes over a pulley and then is fastened to a hanging mass, m 2 = 11.0 kg as shown below. Find the acceleration of each mass and the tension in the cable.