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Published byEdgar George Blake Modified over 9 years ago
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Large scale Small scale Fast vs. slow Frame of reference?
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Objects change in position relative to a reference point. › Reference point should be stationary
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Distance Displacement Total length which an object moves Can be a straight line, but doesn’t have to be Doesn’t have a particular direction Change in position of an object Straight line from the starting point to the final point MUST BE A STRAIGHT LINE!!! Shorter or equal to distance, never more Must have a particular direction (toward/away)
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John’s house Jane’s house School A C B
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Speed – the distance traveled in a given amount of time To calculate speed, must know both distance and time › Speed = distance/time speed = d/t › (SI Units) Distance – meters (m) Time – seconds (s) m/s
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SPEED = DISTANCE TIME DISTANCE = 315 laps TIME = 3 hours SPEED = ? Track length = 1 mile
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V s t
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Constant speed – object covers equal distances in equal amounts of time (doesn’t change) › Example: earth’s rotation Most objects don’t have constant speed
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X-axis – independent variable Y-axis – dependent variable Time is usually independent b/c it will pass whether distance is traveled or not Constant speed is a straight line The slope (rise/run) give the speed of the object Steeper the slope, the faster the speed
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Average speed = distance / time Instantaneous speed – speed at that very instant › Example - speedometer Constant speed – doesn’t change › Example – Earth’s rotation
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Speed in a certain direction Used for navigation, weather Direction can be N, S, E, or W of a fixed point Negative or positive along the line of motion Velocity = displacement (m) / time (s) SI units › m/s
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The speed of these racers may not have changed… Explain why their velocity has changed.
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Can add 2 velocities that are going same direction to get resultant velocities If moving in opposite directions, you subtract to get the resultant velocity
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V d t
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Any change in velocity Change in direction causes acceleration › Examples – moon, race track
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Positive acceleration – object is speeding up › Examples: a car goes from 0mi/hr to 60 mi/hr in 3 seconds. Negative acceleration – object is slowing down › Example: skier stopping from 20m/s in.5s
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Acceleration can be determined by the change in velocity over a change in time ACCELERATION = FINAL VELOCITY – INITIAL VELOCITY TIME a = (v f - v i )/(t f - t i ) SI units: › (m/s)-(m/s) / s = m/s 2
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Identify two conditions that must be met for these joggers to be at zero acceleration. 1. No change of direction. 2. No change (increase/decrease) in speed.
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Acceleration can be determined by a velocity-time graph › The slope of the line gives you the value of acceleration › Positive slope – object is speeding up (positive acceleration)
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› Negative slope – object is slowing down (negative acceleration) › Horizontal line – velocity is not changing, thus the acceleration is 0m/s 2
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Force – an action which changes an objects state of rest or motion › Has magnitude and direction Examples of FORCES: › Gravity › Friction › Engines
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Net force – combination of all the forces acting on an object › If net force =0, the object is balanced Doesn’t move › If net force is unbalanced, object accelerates in the direction which force is greater
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Friction – force that acts against a motion in progress › Constant force has to be applied to an object to keep it moving Example: car will eventually stop, if gas is not applied › Friction also affects stationary object Example: truck parked on hill – friction of brakes provides a force against gravity
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Static Friction Kinetic Friction Friction b/w 2 stationary surfaces Greater than kinetic Friction b/w 2 moving surfaces Less than static b/c it takes more force to make an object start moving than to keep it moving Sliding friction – 2 objects slide past each other Rolling friction – round object rolls over a flat surface › Usually less than sliding
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Air resistance opposes motion › Example: as a car moves, it must push the air out of the way › The easier the air is pushed out of the way, the faster it will go › Designing the shape of the car so that less air must be displaced is called streamlining
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Harmful Helpful Road rash Carpet burn Wear and tear on car tires Racing Air hockey B/w road and tires makes driving possible Sand on icy roads Stopping a car Racing
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Sir Isaac Newton described the relationship b/w motion and force in 3 laws
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An object at rest remains at rest and an object in motion maintains its velocity unless it experiences an unbalanced force. › Example: as car stops suddenly, body keeps moving Inertia – tendency of an object to resist a change in velocity (speed & direction) until acted upon
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Inertia is related to mass of an object › Object with small mass has less inertia than object with large mass Example: softball & bowling ball Other examples of inertia: › Lean toward side around curves › Seatbelts keep you from continuing to move › Car seat has a more equal distribution of weight keeping baby safe
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The unbalanced force acting on an object equals the objects mass times its acceleration Force=mass x acceleration F=ma SI unit › Newtons (N) = Kg x m/s 2
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Example: empty grocery cart vs. full cart
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Law of Universal Gravitation – all objects in the universe attract each other through gravitational force Force = G (m 1 x m 2 /d 2 ) G=6.673 x 10-11 N x m 2 /kg 2 Gravitational force increases as 1 or both masses increase Gravitational force decreases as distance b/w masses increase
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Acceleration depends on the mass of the object and the unbalanced force applied › More mass – harder to accelerate › More force – faster acceleration
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When gravity is the only force acting on an object it is in free fall › If there were no air resistance, all objects would fall to the Earth at the same speed: 9.8m/s 2 (acceleration due to gravity)
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Weight is the force of gravity on an object Weight = mass x gravity w = mg SI unit is Newton (N) › Kg x m/s 2
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The mass of an object is always the same, but weight changes as gravity changes. › Example: an astronaut has a mass of 66kg. What is his weight on Earth and on the moon? On the moon gravity is 1.6 m/s 2
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The force of gravity is constant: › Air resistance increases as you fall › It eventually equals force of gravity › Equal force of gravity & air = 0 acceleration › No acceleration means constant velocity (max) called terminal velocity
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Orbiting objects are in free fall: › Move forward then free fall toward other object Projectile motion – curved path that an object follows when thrown, launched, or projected › Combination of forward horizontal motion and downward horizontal motion
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For every action force, there is an equal and opposite reaction force. Can occur when there is no motion: › Example: sitting in chair Or can occur in motion: › Example: rocket
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Momentum- the product of the mass & velocity of an object momentum = mass x velocity p = mv Si Units Kg x m/s Has direction because velocity has direction When force changes motion, momentum changes as well
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Example: calculate the momentum of a 6 kg bowling ball moving at 10m/s down the alley toward the pins.
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Law of Conservation of Momentum: › The total amount of momentum is a system is conserved › Used to predict motion of cars after a collision
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