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All science was based on the teachings of the ancient Greek philosophers Aristotle taught that there was natural and unnatural motion for objects Unnatural.

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Presentation on theme: "All science was based on the teachings of the ancient Greek philosophers Aristotle taught that there was natural and unnatural motion for objects Unnatural."— Presentation transcript:

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2 All science was based on the teachings of the ancient Greek philosophers Aristotle taught that there was natural and unnatural motion for objects Unnatural motion is the result of a force; natural motion leads to the object’s natural place on Earth More massive objects fall faster than less massive objects

3 Then along comes Galileo, born near Pisa, Italy, 1564 The musket ball and cannon ball experiment 1638, Galileo published a book called Discourses and Mathematical Demonstrations Relating to Two New Sciences The basis of modern science – described falling bodies and projectile motion, and was the first to base scientific ideas on the results of experimental observation

4 Einstein called Galileo the father of modern physics and modern science “… all knowledge of reality starts from experience and ends in it. Propositions arrived at by purely logical means are completely empty as regards reality. Because Galileo saw this, and particularly because he drummed it into the scientific world, he is the father of modern physics – indeed, of modern science altogether.”

5 In the 1600s, gravity was the only fundamental force what was understood; the electromagnetic force was not well understood and the strong and weak nuclear forces were unknown Newton realized that rules for the motion of the universe on a large scale could be used to study other fundamental forces Newton predicted that the laws of physics would be able to explain all physical phenomena

6 Einstein built on Newton’s first law with his special theory of relativity – he considered objects travelling at a constant velocity, close to the speed of light (3.0 x 10 8 m/s) Einstein’s theory of general relativity extended Newton’s second and third laws, explaining accelerating objects and gravity

7 Hawking continued with the work of the previous three scientists He built on Newton’s and Einstein’s work, extending it to such topics as black holes and nature of gravity In particular, the idea that black holes can lose mass through something called Hawking radiation

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10 1.Gravitational - due to large mass - operates at large distances - attractive force 2.Electric - magnetism, atoms & molecules - operates at short distances - attractive and/or repulsive force

11 3.Strong Nuclear - protons in nucleus - operates at very small distances 4.Weak Nuclear - radioactivity - operates at very small distances

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15 To add vectors together, place the tip of one vector at the tail of the other vector. The resultant is represented by the vector drawn from the tail of the first vector to the tip of the second vector.

16 Shows all the forces acting on a body

17 Ex. A trunk is acted upon by a force of 25 N [N] and 80 N [W]. What is the net force?

18 Ex. A toy is being fought over by 4 students. Johnny pulls north with a force of 8 N, Billy pulls south with a force of 17 N, Jerry pulls west with a force of 9 N and Andy pulls east with a force of 20 N. What is the net force on the toy?


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