Newton’s Laws. Isaac Newton – The Theorist Key question: Why are things happening? Invented calculus and physics while on vacation from college His three.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Beginning of Modern Astronomy
Advertisements

Newton’s Laws. Isaac Newton – The Theorist Key question: Why are things happening? Invented calculus and physics while on vacation from college His three.
Lecture 9 ASTR 111 – Section 002.
Galileo, Newton and the Birth of Astrophysics
Explain why the Earth precesses and the consequences
© 2004 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley 5.1 Describing Motion: Examples from Daily Life Distinguish between speed, velocity, and acceleration.
Welcome to Physical Science. Inertia The Tendency of things to resist changes in motion.
Today’s Lectures: The Laws of Gravity Speed, velocity, acceleration, force Mass, momentum and inertia Newton’s three laws of motion The Force of Gravity.
Chapter 4: Forces & Newton’s Laws of Motion Lecture Notes
Physics 202: Introduction to Astronomy – Lecture 4 Carsten Denker Physics Department Center for Solar–Terrestrial Research.
Kepler’s Laws of Planetary Motion
Phy 211: General Physics I Chapter 5: Force & Motion I Lecture Notes.
Chapter 2 Gravity and Motion Copyright (c) The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Chapter 13: Kinetics of a Particle: Force and Acceleration.
Introduction to Gravity and Orbits. Isaac Newton Born in England in 1642 Invented calculus in early twenties Finally published work in gravity in 1687.
Today’s APODAPOD  Start Reading NASA website (Oncourse)  2 nd Homework due TODAY  IN-CLASS QUIZ NEXT FRIDAY!! The Sun Today A100 Solar System.
Chapter 4: Newton and Universal Motion
AMY SHANTA BABOOLAL PHYSICS PROJECT: MECHANICS. ARISTOTLE’S ARGUMENTS One of his well known arguments is: to understand change, a distinction must be.
Lecture 9 ASTR 111 – Section 002.
The Foundations of Science Nature everywhere obeys the same simple laws.
Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation
Universal Laws of Motion “ If I have seen farther than others, it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants.” Sir Isaac Newton (1642 – 1727) Physicist.
Algebraic Statements And Scaling. Newton’s Laws of Motion (Axioms) 1.Every body continues in a state of rest or in a state of uniform motion in a straight.
Newton’s Laws of Motion 1. If the sum of all external forces on an object is zero, then its speed and direction will not change. Inertia 2. If a nonzero.
Newton’s second Law The net external force on a body is equal to the mass of that body times its acceleration F = ma. Or: the mass of that body times its.
 Galileo was the first who recognize the fact that all bodies, irrespective of their masses, fall towards the earth with a constant acceleration.  The.
DYNAMICS The motion of a body is affected by other bodies present in the universe. This influence is called an interaction. vectors: force torque impulse.
Forces and Motion Chapter 2 – Gravity, Motion, and Light.
ISAAC NEWTON’S PHYSICS PRINCIPLES. WHAT NEWTON DID When it comes to science, Isaac Newton is most famous for his creation of the THREE LAWS OF MOTION.
Newton’s First Law of Motion – Inertia
Sponge - Write Kepler’s three laws of planetary motion in your own words.
Newton’s Laws of Motion Chapter 4. Why do things move? Aristotle’s view ( developed over 2000 yrs ago ): A force always has to act on an object to cause.
Apples and Planets PTYS Feb List of Symbols F, force a, acceleration (not semi-major axis in this lecture) v, velocity M, mass of Sun m,
The Limits of Kepler’s Laws. Kepler’s laws allowed the relative size of the solar system to be calculated, but not the actual size.
Chapter 12 Universal Law of Gravity
Laws of Motion Forces: chapter st Law An object at rest remains at rest and an object in motion maintains its velocity unless it experiences an.
Newton's Laws This is where the real physics begins. Physics is more than equations and math problems -- it is the laws of the universe and, most importantly,
Newton’s Laws. How far away is the Moon? The Greeks used a special configuration of Earth, Moon and Sun (link) in a lunar eclipselink Can measure EF in.
Describing Motion: Examples from Daily Life Distinguish between speed, velocity, and acceleration. What is the acceleration of gravity? How does the acceleration.
Newton’s Law By: Brigitte Paulet. Sir Isaac Newton was born on January 4, March 20, He mainly worked on the absence of force, weight, & speed.
Forces and Motion Chapter 2 – Gravity, Motion, and Light.
Orbital Motion = Kepler Explained  “Compromise”: planet moves in curved orbit Planet wants to move in a straight line of constant velocity (Newton 1)
Gravity and Motion. Gravity is what gives the universe its _________ A universal force that acts on _________ the objects in the universe Every particle.
A New Era of Science Mathematics as a tool for understanding physics.
Newton’s Laws Sir Isaac Newton was the first to formulate ideas about how to describe the causes of motion. He came up with the universal laws in the book.
Physics 211 Force and Equilibrium Hookes Law Newtons Laws Weight Friction Free Body Diagrams Force Problems 4: Classical Mechanics - Newtons Laws.
Acceleration, Weight and Mass. Weight Near the surface of the Earth, the pull of gravity on a body is practically constant and every falling body acquires.
Gravitation Reading: pp Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation “Every material particle in the Universe attracts every other material particle.
Gravitation and the Waltz of the Planets Chapter 4.
Newton’s Laws. Achieving Scientific Literacy (Arons Article) Two types of knowledge –Declarative (Learned Facts, “book knowledge”) –Operative (actually.
Universal Laws of Motion “ If I have seen farther than others, it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants.” Sir Isaac Newton (1642 – 1727) Physicist.
Unit 3 Lesson 2 Kepler’s Laws of Planetary Motion.
Satellite Physics & Planetary Motion Illustration from Isaac Newton, Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica, Book III Isaac Newton was the first.
2.1. Who was Isaac Newton? Physicist and mathmetician Invented calculus NEWTON’S 3 LAWS OF MOTION.
You have completed Motion 101: HOW things move Welcome to Motion 102: WHY things move.
Chapter 4 Forces in One Dimension. Classical Mechanics Describes the relationship between the motion of objects in our everyday world and the forces acting.
CH-4: Newton’s Laws: Explaining Motion Brief History Aristotle ( B.C) Galileo Galilei ( ) Isaac Newton ( ) Albert Einstein (1879–1955)
Newton’s Laws.
Sir Isaac Newton ( ) Perhaps the greatest genius of all time
Chapter 3: “Orbits & Gravity"”
Modern Age ISAAC NEWTON.
Newton, Einstein and Gravity
Forces.
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Chapter 5: Force & Motion I Lecture Notes
Isaac Newton ( ) Newton’s Laws of Motion
Chapter 2 Astronomy.
Chapter One, Section Two:
Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation
Newton’s Laws: The New Physics
Presentation transcript:

Newton’s Laws

Isaac Newton – The Theorist Key question: Why are things happening? Invented calculus and physics while on vacation from college His three Laws of Motion, together with the Law of Universal Gravitation, explain all of Kepler’s Laws (and more!) Isaac Newton (1642–1727)

Major Works: Principia (1687) [Full title: Philosophiae naturalis principia mathematica] Opticks [sic!] (1704) Later in life he was Master of the Mint, dabbled in alchemy, and spent a great deal of effort trying to make his enemies miserable

Newton’s first Law In the absence of a net external force, a body either is at rest or moves with constant velocity.force body –Contrary to Aristotle, motion at constant velocity (may be zero) is thus the natural state of objects, not being at rest. Change of velocity needs to be explained; why a body is moving steadily does not.

Mass & Weight Mass is the property of an object Weight is a force, e.g. the force an object of certain mass may exert on a scale

Newton’s second Law The net external force on a body is equal to the mass of that body times its acceleration F = ma. Or: the mass of that body times its acceleration is equal to the net force exerted on it ma = F Or: a=F/m Or: m=F/a

Newton’s 3 rd law For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction Does not sound like much, but that’s where all forces come from!

Newton’s Laws of Motion (Axioms) 1.Every body continues in a state of rest or in a state of uniform motion in a straight line unless it is compelled to change that state by forces acting on it (law of inertia) 2.The change of motion is proportional to the motive force impressed (i.e. if the mass is constant, F = ma) 3.For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction (That’s where forces come from!)

Newton’s Laws a) No force: particle at rest b) Force: particle starts moving c) Two forces: particle changes movement Gravity pulls baseball back to earth by continuously changing its velocity (and thereby its position)  Always the same constant pull

Law of Universal Gravitation Force = G M earth M man / R 2 M Earth M man R

Orbital Motion = Kepler Explained  “Compromise”: planet moves in curved orbit Planet wants to move in a straight line of constant velocity (Newton 1) Sun’s gravitational pull forces planet into orbit by changing direction of planets velocity

It takes a stronger force to make a high speed planet move in an orbit

Cannon “Thought Experiment” ets/newt/newtmtn.htmlhttp:// ets/newt/newtmtn.html

Applications From the distance r between two bodies and the gravitational acceleration a of one of the bodies, we can compute the mass M of the other F = ma = G Mm/r 2 (m cancels out) –From the weight of objects (i.e., the force of gravity) near the surface of the Earth, and known radius of Earth R E = 6.4  10 3 km, we find M E = 6  kg –Your weight on another planet is F = m  GM/r 2 E.g., on the Moon your weight would be 1/6 of what it is on Earth

Applications (cont’d) The mass of the Sun can be deduced from the orbital velocity of the planets: M S = r Orbit v Orbit 2 /G = 2  kg –actually, Sun and planets orbit their common center of mass Orbital mechanics. A body in an elliptical orbit cannot escape the mass it's orbiting unless something increases its velocity to a certain value called the escape velocity –Escape velocity from Earth's surface is about 25,000 mph (7 mi/sec)

From Newton to Einstein If we use Newton II and the law of universal gravity, we can calculate how a celestial object moves, i.e. figure out its acceleration, which leads to its velocity, which leads to its position as a function of time: ma= F = GMm/r 2 so its acceleration a= GM/r 2 is independent of its mass! This prompted Einstein to formulate his gravitational theory as pure geometry.