KINEMATICSDYNAMICS  Describes motion.  The forces that cause motion.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Forces – Chapter 4.
Advertisements

Unit 4 FORCES AND THE LAWS OF MOTION
FORCES Mrs. Cholak.
“ If I have seen farther than others, it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants.” Sir Isaac Newton (1642 – 1727) Physicist.
Chapter 4 Forces and Mass.
Ballistic Cart Demo Discuss law of cosines for planeinwindb problem Other HW problems?
The Laws of Motion Unit 3 Presentation 1.
Chapter 4 The Laws of Motion. Forces Usually think of a force as a push or pull Usually think of a force as a push or pull Vector quantity Vector quantity.
Chapter 4 The Laws of Motion. Classical Mechanics Describes the relationship between the motion of objects in our everyday world and the forces acting.
Chapter 4 Preview Objectives Force Force Diagrams
Classical Mechanics Describes the relationship between the motion of objects in our everyday world and the forces acting on them Conditions when Classical.
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.
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.
S-24 Define the following terms A. Weight B. Gravity C. Friction
Forces are usually divided into two types. 1.Contact forces occur because of physical contact between objects. Examples: pushing open a door pulling.
Forces and the Laws of Motion Chapter Changes in Motion Objectives  Describe how force affects the motion of an object  Interpret and construct.
Chapter 4 The Laws of Motion. Classical Mechanics Describes the relationship between the motion of objects in our everyday world and the forces acting.
Chapter 12 Forces and Motion ForcesForces and Motion 12.1 Forces A force is a push or pull that acts on an object. A force is a push or pull that.
Unit 1 B Newton's Laws of Motion. 2 Classical Mechanics Describes the relationship between the motion of objects in our everyday world and the forces.
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.
What is a Force? A force is a push or a pull causing a change in velocity or causing deformation.
Chapter 3 Review. Vocabulary  When the upward and downward forces on a falling object are equal, the object reaches _____________.  Terminal Velocity.
CHAPTER 4 FORCES IN 1-D FORCE Force is anything which causes a body to start moving when it is at rest, or stop when it is moving, or deflect once it.
Chapter 4 -Day 7 The Laws of Motion. Hi Ho Silver!! Horse A (Appaloosa)leaves from point A and travels 30mph. Horse B (Arabian) leaves point A, 2 hours.
Forces and the Laws of Motion
Chapter 3 Newton’s Laws of Motion Why things move the way the do.
 Define the following terms  A. Weight  B. Gravity  C. Friction S-33 I can explain the relationship between weight, gravity, and friction.
FORCES. A force is an influence on a system or object which, acting alone, will cause the motion of the system or object to change. If a system or object.
Force and Motion This week – This week – Force and Motion – Chapter 4 Force and Motion – Chapter 4.
Bell Work Consider the following question, select (a) A=Agree, (b) D=Disagree (c) NS=Not Sure A brick is lying on the bed of a truck, ___ (1) the brick.
Forces Today’s Goal: 1.Describe and give examples of the law of inertia and understand that inertia is a basic property of matter.
Chapter 4 Newton’s First Law of Motion: Inertia. Newton’s First Law - Inertia In Fancy Terms: Every object continues in a state of rest, or of motion.
Types of Forces. Gravitational Force  An attractive force between all objects that have mass.  On Earth gravity is a downward force, always pulling.
The Laws of Motion. Classical Mechanics Describes the relationship between the motion of objects in our everyday world and the forces acting on them Describes.
Chapter 4 The Laws of Motion. Classical Mechanics Describes the relationship between the motion of objects in our everyday world and the forces acting.
Dynamics!.
Chapter 5 The Laws of Motion.
Sir Isaac Newton (1642 – 1727) Physicist
Raymond A. Serway Chris Vuille Chapter Four The Laws of Motion.
REVISION NEWTON’S LAW. Quantity with magnitude and direction. e.g. displacement, velocity, acceleration, force and weight.. VECTOR Quantity having only.
Forces Ch 7 6 th grade. 7.1 Vocabulary Force Net force.
Physics Section 4.4 Describe various types of forces Weight is a measure of the gravitational force exerted on an object. It depends upon the objects.
Test #3 Notes Forces and the Laws of Motion Circular Motion and Gravitation Chapters 4 and 7.
Forces & Motion. What is a Force? Force: push or pull Unit: Newton (N)  Kg x m/s 2 Vector: has both magnitude & direction.
Forces. I. Section 1 A. Newton- (N) the SI unit for the magnitude of a force. Also called weight. B. Force- a push or a pull. Described by its magnitude.
FORCES Chapter 5. Mechanics The study of Motion Isaac Newton, 1600’s The father of mechanics.
FORCES. FORCE A push or pull acting on an object typically measured in Newtons (kgm/s 2 ) is a vector (Has a magnitude And direction)vector can be combined.
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.
CHAPTER 4 FORCES. Force  What do you think a force is?  It is a push or pull on an object  A force is a vector quantity.
Chapter 4 The Laws of Motion.
Forces Ch TrueFalseStatementTrueFalse Force causes objects at rest to move, or objects moving to keep moving Balanced forces have a net force of.
Forces. What is a Force? A force is a push or pull acting on an object that changes the motion of the object.
Physics Section 4.4 Describe various types of forces Weight is a measure of the gravitational force exerted on an object. It depends upon the objects.
1 Chapter 5 The Laws of Motion. 2 Force Forces are what cause any change in the velocity of an object A force is that which causes an acceleration The.
1 Physics: Chapter 4 Forces & the Laws of Motion Topics:4-1 Changes in Motion 4-2 Newton’s First Law 4-3 Newton’s Second & Third Laws 4-4 Everyday Forces.
Raymond A. Serway Chris Vuille Chapter Four The Laws of Motion.
Chapter 4 Forces in One Dimension. Classical Mechanics Describes the relationship between the motion of objects in our everyday world and the forces acting.
The Laws of Motion. Classical Mechanics Describes the relationship between the motion of objects in our everyday world and the forces acting on them Describes.
The Dynamics of Newton’s Laws
Chapter 4 The Laws of Motion.
Chapter 8 Forces & Motion.
Chapter Four The Laws of Motion.
Forces Chapter 5.
Forces Force- a push or pull
UNIT 2 MECHANICS Chapter 5 Dynamics.
CHAPTER 4 FORCES IN 1-D.
Chapter 4 Newton’s Laws.
Forces & Motion.
The Laws of Motion (not including Atwood)
Forces & Newton’s Laws of Motion
Presentation transcript:

KINEMATICSDYNAMICS  Describes motion.  The forces that cause motion.

Elementary Definition: Force – a push or a pull Not totally accurate though.

True Physics Definition: Force – any action that can cause a change of motion in an object

 Vector quantity – Forces have magnitude and direction  May be a contact force or a field force  Contact forces result from physical contact between two objects  Field forces act between objects that are not in physical contact

CONTACT FORCESFIELD FORCES  Elastic Force (F elas )  Frictional Force (F fric )  Applied Force (F A )  Tensional Force (F tens )  Normal Force (F N )  Buoyant Force (F B )  Strong Nuclear Force  Electromagnetic Force  Gravitational Force (F g )  Electric Force (F elec )  Magnetic Force (F mag )

Physical contact must be present during the exertion of the force. Elastic Force (F elas ) – due to stretching or compression of an elastic object (rubber band, springs, basketball bouncing) Tensional Force (F tens ) - due to objects pulled by a rope or cable-like object Frictional Force (F Fr ) – any force that opposes motion due to two types of matter coming in contact (air resistance, cleats on a grass field)

Physical contact must be present during the exertion of the force. Applied Force (F A ) – generic term for any other type of force (boxer strikes another fighter, wrecking ball hits the building) Normal Force (F N ) – force that acts perpendicularly when an object is on a surface Buoyant Force (F B ) – upward force due to a fluid (liquid or gas) pushing on an object

From strongest to weakest … Strong nuclear force – holds particles in nucleus together Electromagnetic force – electric and magnetic fields. Holds particles together so that they can bend, stretch or shatter. Gravitational – attractive force that exists between all objects

1. Normal 2. Frictional 3. Tensional 4. Electromagnetic 5. Applied

1. Strong Nuclear 2. Magnetic 3. Frictional 4. Gravitational 5. Electromagnetic

1. Normal 2. Applied 3. Frictional 4. Tensional 5. Gravitational

1. Normal 2. Net 3. Frictional 4. Tensional 5. Summation

1. Normal 2. Magnetic 3. Frictional 4. Tensional 5. Applied

1. Normal 2. Electromagnetic 3. Frictional 4. Tensional 5. Applied

 Must identify all the forces acting on the object of interest.  Choose an appropriate coordinate system.  If the free body diagram is incorrect, the solution will likely be incorrect.

 Mass is the quantity of matter contained in an object  SI unit of mass is the kilogram (kg)  Weight is the gravitational force exerted on an object  This weight can change based on gravitational fluctuations while mass stays constant.

 SI unit of force is a Newton (N) – the amount of force needed to accelerate a 1kg object by 1 m/s each second  US Customary unit of force is a pound (lb)  1 N = lb

Weight is considered a force – F g F g = m a g F g = m x 9.8 because a = 9.8 m/s 2 downward

 Forces cause changes in motion  Motion can occur in the absence of forces (if they are already in motion)  All the forces acting on an object are added as vectors to find the net force acting on the object  m is not a force itself  Newton’s Second Law is a vector equation

 1642 – 1727  Formulated basic concepts and laws of mechanics  Universal Gravitation  Calculus  Light and optics

 An object at rest will stay at rest and an object in motion will stay in motion unless a nonzero net force acts on it.  An object moves with a constant velocity unless acted upon by a net force (nonzero).  Examples of Newton's First Law - Fun in Space Examples of Newton's First Law - Fun in Space

 Also referred to as the Law of Inertia  Inertia – the tendency of an object to remain in its present state (at rest or in motion at constant velocity)  Inertia is directly proportional to mass. As the mass increases, the tendency to retain the present state of motion increases.

Commonly shortened to “F=ma”. Correctly, it is :  Only forces which act on that object affect the acceleration of the object.  Forces exert by the object on another object do not.

 If mass is held constant, acceleration is directly proportional to the net force.  To produce the same amount of acceleration, as the mass increases, the force must also increase.  If the force is held constant, as the mass increases the acceleration will decrease. Now draw a graph for each scenario.

Newton’s Third Law – when one object exerts a force on a second object, the second object exerts a force on the first that is equal in magnitude, but opposite in direction Forces always occur in pairs. (action / reaction pairs) (ex: push on a door, we feel door push back)

Action-reaction forces – equal in magnitude, opposite in direction. Also, action-reaction force pairs ALWAYS act on DIFFERENT objects. A single isolated force cannot exist.

Where in real-life do we try to reduce weight to reduce required force?

Friction – the force that opposes the motion between two surfaces that are in contact.

There are two main kinds of friction: static friction – the force that opposes the start of motion sliding or kinetic friction – the force between surfaces while in motion (Also rolling friction – but we won’t deal with this one.)

To calculate force of friction (F F ), use the equation: F Fr = μF N or μ = F Fr /F N μ = coefficient of friction, constant for any two types of matter μ = ratio of the frictional force to the normal force Frictional force is directly proportional to the μ.

F fr is always parallel to the surface and opposite the motion of the object. F N is force normal, or force perpendicular to surface. μ represents coefficient of friction, and changes with surface

Air resistance is the net force of the air molecules striking a moving object - another source of friction - without air resistance (like in a vacuum, all objects would fall unimpeded at the acceleration of gravity.

When force of air resistance equals the force of gravity, terminal velocity is reached. - velocity becomes constant For example, terminal velocities: ping pong ball – 6 m/s skydiver - 60 m/s skydiver w/chute – 5 m/s

How does a parachute work? How else could a diver change his/her terminal velocity?