Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJordan O’Brien’ Modified over 9 years ago
1
Velocity Definition: the speed and direction of motion of an object. Example: The car moved at a velocity of 20 m/s toward the east.
2
Acceleration Definition: the rate of change in velocity as a function of time. Example: The falling rock accelerated at a constant rate of 9.8m/s 2.
3
1 s | 2 s | 3 s | 4 s | Velocity Acceleration
4
Mass Definition: how much the object will resist change to velocity. Example: The table was hard to move because it had a large mass.
5
Weight Definition: the force of gravity on an object. Example: Your weight is less on the Moon than on Earth.
6
Force Definition: a “ pushing ” or “pulling ” on an object. Example: I applied a force to move the chair.
7
F norm F grav
8
Normal Force Definition: a force perpendicular to the object’s contact surface. F F norm
9
F F F frict norm grav
10
Friction Definition: the force that acts opposite to the motion of one object in contact with another object. Example: the force of friction opposed the motion of the sliding box, slowing it down.
11
F norm F grav app frict F F
12
Net Force Definition: the vector sum of forces. “Sigma F” F net = 15 N up
14
Static Friction Definition: friction that prevents the sliding motion between two objects. Example: the static friction between the basketball player’s sneakers and the floor kept him from sliding.
15
f static F norm F grav Finish Line Finish Line
16
Kinetic Friction Definition: friction that occurs between two objects when when one object slides against another Example: the kinetic friction from rubbing my hands together warmed them on the cold winter’s night.
17
f kinetic F norm F grav ouch!
18
Newton’s first law of motion The Law of Inertia an object in motion stays in motion with the same velocity an object at rest stays at rest unless acted upon by an unbalanced force
19
Newton’s second law of motion is directly related to the magnitude of the force, and inversely related to the mass of the object The acceleration of an object produced by a net applied force The net force equals mass times acceleration F net = ma The net force equals mass times acceleration F net = ma
20
F= maF= maF= maF= ma F = m a
21
for every action (force) there is an equal and opposite reaction (force). Forces come in pairs! Newton’s third law of motion Example: the angry bird exerts a force on the blocks and the blocks exert an equal and opposite force back.
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.