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Describing Motion Newton’s Laws
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First we need to define the word FORCE: The cause of motion (may cause objects to start/stop moving or change directions) Two types of forces –Pushes –Pulls
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Forces are measured in Newtons SI unit of force Symbol: N Measured by using a spring scale
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Forces may be balanced or unbalanced Balanced forces – all forces acting on an object are equal –There is NO MOTION Unbalanced forces – one or more forces acting on an object are stronger than others –There is MOTION A NET FORCE – the overall force when all forces are added 1 0 1 1 2 1 1 2 3
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Newton’s Laws First Law – Inertia Second Law – Acceleration, Force & Mass Third Law – Action-Reaction
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First Law Inertia –An object at rest [not moving] remains at rest unless acted on by a force [push or pull] –An object in motion remains in motion unless acted on by a force [push or pull]
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Inertia Tendency of an object to resist change in its motion Ex. If you are not wearing a seat belt when a car crashes inertia continues to carry you forward
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First Law Inertia & Mass –Mass is the amount of matter in an object –The more MASS an object has, the more INERTIA the object has. –Bigger objects are harder to start & stop http://toons.artie.com
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Second Law Acceleration & Mass Definitions –Acceleration is a change in velocity [speed or direction] –Mass is the amount of matter in an object
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Second Law Acceleration & Force –The more force placed on an object, the more it will accelerate [change its motion] Acceleration & Mass –The more mass [or inertia] an object has, the more force it takes to accelerate the object
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Third Law Action – Reaction –Forces are always produced in pairs with opposite directions & equal strengths –For every force there is an equal and opposite force
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The truck is in motion. What is the force that causes it to stop? The push of the stopped car. The car is at rest. What is the force that causes it to move? The push of the truck.
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What about the ladder on top of the truck? The ladder is in motion because the truck is in motion. When the truck stops, the ladder stays in motion. The truck is stopped by the force of the car, but the ladder is not. What force stops the ladder? Gravity.
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The truck is in motion, the car is at rest. How do each of these vehicles accelerate? The truck stops moving. The car starts moving. Which one will be the hardest to accelerate? The truck because it has the most mass.
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Why does the car move [accelerate] when it is hit by the truck? The heavy and moving truck has more force than the small, at rest car. Why does the truck stop moving when it hits the car? The force of the car pushing back on the truck, plus the force of friction between the massive truck and the road slow down, the stop the truck.
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The truck hits the car. An action force stops the truck. What is the equal and opposite reaction force? The force that pushes the car forward. http://archive.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Cyberia/VideoTestbed/Projects/NewPhy sics/newtons_3.html
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““Friction”” Is opposite resistance to an objects direction in motion Depends on 2 factors The two surfaces involved How hard are the surfaces pushing against each other
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Types of Friction Sliding - solids over each other Rolling - when an object rolls over a surface F luid - objects moving through fluids (liquid or gases)
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Weight vs. Gravity Weight is a measure of the force of gravity on an object, mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object You have the same mass on the Moon as Earth, but different weights
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Gravity Gravity is a force between any two objects, the force of gravity is related to the mass of the objects, and their distance from each other
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Force in Fluids Force is applied to a fluid causing pressure increase in a fluid The heart applies pressure to the blood forcing it through your vessels, blood flow in the body requires force
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