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6-3 INTERACTION FORCES
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Identifying Interaction Forces “For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction” What is an action, what is a reaction, and why are they equal
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Catching a ball Ball is thrown and then caught by a person Two systems involved??? Hand on ball = F hand on ball Ball on hand = F ball on hand F A on B & F B on A Called action-reaction pairs
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Misconception One force causes action on another: NOT TRUE Force of the hand on the ball DOESN’T cause the ball to exert a force on the hand. The two forces exist together or not at all
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Newton’s 3 rd Law Interaction pair Two forces that are in opposite directions and have equal magnitude Force of the hand on the ball is equal in magnitude and opposite in direction to the force of the ball on the hand 3 rd Law All forces come in pairs F A on B = -F B on A
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Problems You lift a bowling ball with your hand, accelerating it upward. What are the forces on the ball? What are the other parts of the action-reaction pairs? On what objects are they exerted? Force of hand on ball, Fg of earth’s mass on ball Force of ball on hand, Fg of ball’s mass on earth Force of feet on earth, force of earth on feet
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Four Fundamentals Given in student power points
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Tension of Ropes Rope holding up a bucket F T(top on bottom) F T(bottom on top) Interaction pair: equal and opposite
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Tug of War If team A pulls with 500 N of force and team B pulls with 500 N of force, what is the total? F T(A on rope), F T(right on left) = 500 N F T(B on rope), F T(left on right) = 500 N Because they are equal and opposite Tension of rope = 500 N
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