Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Mass and Motion
2
Mass Matter has substance. Solids, liquids or gasesSolids, liquids or gases Subatomic particlesSubatomic particles Planets and starsPlanets and stars Weight is not mass, but mass can have weight. Mass measures the amount of matter in an object.
3
Mass Units Mass is measured in kilograms. 1 kg = 1000 g 1 atomic mass unit (about the mass of one hydrogen atom) = 1.66 x 10 -27 kg Pounds measure weight (a force) not mass. © R. Rathe, NIST
4
Force and Acceleration With force there is acceleration. The amount of acceleration depends on the mass. Mass is a scalar. Mass times a vector gives another vector.Mass times a vector gives another vector. The direction of the force and acceleration are the same.The direction of the force and acceleration are the same.
5
Force Units Force is mass times acceleration. The dimensions of force are M(L/T 2 ). In SI units a newton (N) = 1 kg m / s 2.
6
Second Law: Law of Acceleration 2 The change in motion is proportional to the net force and the change is made in the same direction as the net force. Net force gives rise to acceleration. Force = mass x acceleration (Newton’s second law). Rocket: has mass Force: becomes acceleration Initial velocity Final velocity: changed by the force
7
Vector Force A 1000 kg satellite in space is moving at 5.0 km/s when a rocket fires with a thrust of 5.0 x 10 3 N at 60° to the direction of motion. The rocket fires for 1 minute. Where does it move after firing? Identify the quantities in the problem: Mass, m = 1000 kg Initial velocity, v 0 = 5 x 10 3 m/s Force, F = 5 x 10 3 N at 60° Time, t = 1 min = 60 s Force and velocity are vectors Pick x in the direction of initial motion: v x = v 0. F x = F cos F y = F sin x = 60 F = 5000 N
8
Change in Velocity A 1000 kg satellite in space is moving at 5.0 km/s when a rocket fires with a thrust of 5.0 x 10 3 N at 60° to the direction of motion. The rocket fires for 1 minute. Where does it move after firing? The force gives acceleration. a x = F x /m = (F/m) cos a y = F y /m = (F/m) sin The change in velocity is due to this acceleration. v x = v 0 + a x t = v 0 + (F t / m) cos v y = a y t = (F t / m) sin The final velocity is v x = 5200 m/s = 5.2 km/s v y = 260 m/s = 0.26 km/s. next v v0v0
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.