1 4 outline Newton’s 2 nd Law friction dynamics of falling objects RQ: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 11, 13, 14, 16, 18, 20, 21, 24, 26, 27, 30, 31, 33. Ex: 2,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
FORCES Mrs. Cholak.
Advertisements

Forces.
Chapter 4 – Forces and Newton’s Laws of Motion
& ForcesForces. inertia the tendency of an object to resist any change in its motion Inertia is a property of matter and does not depend on the position.
L-6 – Newton's Second Law Objects have a property called inertia which causes them to resist changes in their motion (Newton’s1st Law or Galileo’s law.
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Forces A force is an interaction (push or pull) between objects. Forces can be divided into two categories: 1.Contact forces Push or pull between two objects.
Newton 2 Slide 1 Newton’s 2 nd Law of Motion Force and Acceleration.
Foundations of Physics
Motion Notes Speed Momentum Acceleration and Force Friction and Air Resistance Newton’s Laws of Motion.
Today: Chap 4 - Newton’s Second Law Will establish a relationship between force (chap 2) and acceleration (chap. 3). Reminder:
Newton 2 Slide 1 Newton’s 2 nd Law of Motion Force and Acceleration.
Newton’s 2 nd Law. Force on Object Objects acted on by a net unbalanced force will accelerate in the direction of the force This means they will speed.
1 4 outline Newton’s 2 nd Law friction dynamics of falling objects RQ: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 11, 13, 14, 16, 18, 20, 21, 24, 26, 27, 30, 31, 33. Ex: 2,
Physics 1100 –Spring 2012 Chapter 4 – Newton’s Second Law of Motion Force Causes Acceleration Friction Mass and Weight Mass Resists Acceleration Newton’s.
1 Newton’s Laws Isaac Newton born: Dec 25, st. Law of motion: The Law of Inertia (Actually, this is not Newton's idea, it is a restatement of.
Chapter 4 Forces Forces and Interaction Force – a “push or pull” Contact Force – you physically push on a wall Long-range Force – like magnets or gravity.
March 26, 2014 Homework: Read pgs , define highlighted terms from reading and pick two main ideas from each heading- leave spaces for additional.
Notes – Chapter 4 – Forces in One Dimension. Force Force - Any push or pull acting on an object F = vector notation for the magnitude and direction F.
What is a Force? A force is a push or a pull causing a change in velocity or causing deformation.
I. Newton’s Laws of Motion
Lecture 11: Laws of motion. Newton’s 1 st Law: Inertia Matter resists motion If at rest, it will stay at rest If in motion, it will stay in motion Mass.
Newton’s Laws of Motion 1 st - Inertia. 2 nd - F = ma 3 rd - Action/Reaction Take notes when see.
Chapter 2 Sir Isaac Newton’s Three Laws of Motion.
L-6 – Newton's Second Law Objects have a property called inertia which causes them to resist changes in their motion (Newton’s1 st Law or Galileo’s law.
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.
Gravity The force of attraction between objects that is due to their masses.
1 4 Topics force and net force types of forces Newton’s Laws & force diagrams Ch.4 Homework: 1, 3, 5, 6, 8, 13, 16, 23, 26, 34, 39, 45, 49, 62, 63, 66,
Unit 3 Forces & Motion. Forces Force- an action applied to an object to change its motion(push or pull) Units of lb, N (equal to kg. m/sec 2 ) If forces.
Chapter 12.  Force: a push or pull that acts on an object  Key Point: a force can cause a resting object to move or it can accelerate a moving object.
Dynamics!.
Basic Information: Force: A push or pull on an object Forces can cause an object to: Speed up Slow down Change direction Basically, Forces can cause an.
Unit 3 Forces & Motion. Forces Force- an action applied to an object to change its motion(push or pull) Units of lb, N (equal to kg. m/sec 2 ) If forces.
Forces, The laws of Motion & Momentum.
L-6 – The Laws of Motion Objects have a property called inertia which causes them to resist changes in their motion (Newton’s1st Law or Galileo’s law of.
Force and Motion The only reason an object changes it velocity is because a force acts on the object. Remember a change in velocity can be either a change.
Unit 2: Motion and Force in One Dimension  6.1 Mass, Weight and Gravity  6.2 Friction  6.3 Equilibrium of Forces and Hooke’s Law Chapter 6: Forces and.
Force (Chapter 3) Sep 29 Write everything in the yellow font.
FORCES AND CIRCULAR MOTION. A. Definition: a push or pull acting on a mass 1. Force is a vector quantity with both magnitude (numeric value) and direction.
Forces and the laws of motion. Force A bat strikes the ball with a force that causes the ball to stop and then move in the opposite direction.
Chapter 3 Forces & Motion. Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion An object at rest will remain at rest unless acted upon by an unbalanced force. An object in 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.
This lecture will help you understand:
Forces and Newton’s Laws of Motion
Lec 04: Newton’s Second Law
Skydiving from space!! What can potentially go wrong? Does his acceleration change?
Net force, F=ma, and friction
Forces Ch
Forces FORCEMAN.
Forces.
Newton’s 1 and 2 and Egg Drop
Motion & Forces.
FORCE and MOTION Unit 1.
Newton’s Laws.
Forces.
Conceptual Physics 11th Edition
STATE EXPECTATIONS - FORCES
All things with are affected by .
Newton’s Laws of Motion Chapters 2,3,6,7
Chapter 3 Forces & Newton’s Laws
Forces.
Gravity, Mass and Weight
Forces.
Chunk 4 Newton’s Laws of Motion.
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Motion and Forces.
Lec. 6 – The Laws of Motion Objects have a property called inertia which causes them to resist changes in their motion (Newton’s1st Law or Galileo’s law.
L-6 – The Laws of Motion Objects have a property called inertia which causes them to resist changes in their motion (Newton’s1st Law or Galileo’s law of.
Chap 4 - Newton’s Second Law
Presentation transcript:

1 4 outline Newton’s 2 nd Law friction dynamics of falling objects RQ: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 11, 13, 14, 16, 18, 20, 21, 24, 26, 27, 30, 31, 33. Ex: 2, 3, 20, 31, 32, 33, 42, 43, 44. Problems: 2, 3, 5.

2 example uses design crumple zones (cars & barriers) power requirements for cars parachute design elevator design /

3 force & acceleration Net force  acceleration acceleration ~ net force e.g. The net force on a car is doubled. The acceleration of the car will then also double in size. (“~” means “directly proportional to”)

4 Newton’s Second Law: the acceleration of an object is proportional to the Net External Force acting on it, and inversely proportional to the object’s mass. acceleration

5 Effect of a Net Force object at rest begins to move moving object changes its: speed or direction or both. change in velocity is in the same direction as the net force on the object.

7 Finding Net Force Using Diagrams Example of adding two perpendicular Forces A = 3, B = 4: A) Walk 3 steps forward. B) Turn left or right, walk 4 steps in this direction. C) Walk directly between the starting and ending locations counting your steps. Distance in “steps” in (C) is the Net of the two forces.

8 Ex. Net Force Rightward Car moving to right net force is to right Speed increases

9 Ex. Net Force Leftward Car moving to right net force is directed left Car slows down

10 Ex. Net Force Downward Ball is tossed to right net force is down object turns downward

11 Mass and Weight Mass is the quantity of matter. Mass measures “inertia”. Mass is measured in kilograms (kg) Weight is the force on mass due to gravity. Weight is measured in newtons (N) or pounds (lb). Weight ~ Mass 1 kg of mass has a weight of 2.2 lbs

12 Comparing Accelerations of Objects in Free Fall. Downward force is weight. a = weight/mass but an object with twice the mass will have twice the weight… so the accelerations are the same… We call this acceleration “g”. g is about 10m/s/s downward.

13 Friction Objects in contact “like each other”, i.e. they form a “bond”. They resist being moved when in contact. Ex. A Chest sitting on a wood floor seems “glued” down. It is harder to get it moving than it is to keep it moving. These resistance forces are called “frictional forces”.

14 Direction of Frictional Forces Frictional forces oppose the direction of motion of object if it is moving.

15 Direction of Frictional Forces (cont.) If the object is at rest there still may be a frictional force. If there is a frictional force then it is in a direction opposite to the direction of the net applied force due to other causes.

16 Categories of Friction Sliding Friction: exists when one object slides against a second object, e.g. box along floor. Static Friction: exists when a force is applied to an object, but that force is not large enough to break the frictional bond. Air friction force ~ (speed of object) 2. /

Weight Force Weight (N) = mass (kg) x (10N/kg) Weight = mg g = 10 m/s/s = 10 N/kg Acts at all times, e.g. object is falling, sitting, etc. Ex: A 2kg object weighs 20N. Weight = (2kg)(10N/kg) = 20N /

18 Free-Fall only force is object’s weight air drag is negligible in size Ex. A solid steel ball falling a short distance is in free-fall. Ex. A falling feather is not in free-fall since air drag is equal to its weight

19 Non Free Fall Whenever air drag is significant compared to weight the object will fall with acceleration less than 10m/s/s. Example: A 5kg object weighs 50N but an air drag force of 10N acts on it. Acceleration = NetForce/mass = (50-10)N/5kg = 40/5 m/s/s = 8 m/s/s /

Ex. Falling Motion 1 M = 1kg, speed is small, air friction = 0. Weight is 10N. Net force = 10N – 0 = 10 N Acceleration = Net Force/Mass = 10N/1kg = 10 m/s/s N/kg = m/s/s /

Ex. Falling Motion 2 M = 1kg, speed is large and air friction is 1/3 the weight = 10N/3 =3.33N Net force = 10N – 3.33N = 6.67N Acceleration = Net Force/Mass = 6.67N/1kg = 6.67m/s/s /

Ex. Falling Motion 3 M = 1kg, speed is larger and air friction is equal to the object weight = 10 N Net force = 10N – 10N = 0N Acceleration = Net Force/Mass = 0N/1kg = 0 m/s/s /

23 Terminal Speed/Velocity Air drag on falling objects increases… until equal to the objects weight… … resulting in balanced forces acceleration = 0, speed no longer changes This top speed is called the “terminal velocity” of the object… … and varies from object to object.

24 4 summary Newton’s 2 nd Law relates net force, mass, and acceleration. It also covers the 1 st Law. frictional forces are proportional to the forces holding objects together falling objects accelerate until air drag equals their weight

25 p.11 practicing physics Mass is fundamental, does not depend on location Mass is not a vector and not a force, it is simply a number 1kg mass “weighs” 10N on earth (2.2lbs), less on the moon Weight = mg (earth g = 10m/s/s)