Transcript NSCI 310

Force and Motion:
Content Introduction
* Consider everything we
have done so far on force and
motion as the exploration part
of the learning cycle.
Motion – Position
A. Position – in 1 dimension it is the
place on a number line. The position
can be positive or negative. (MKS
units: meters)
-x
0
+x
B. Distance – the actual length traveled.
C. Change in position – the final position
minus the initial position for the time
interval considered.
Motion –Velocity
A. Speed – how fast something is
moving. (MKS units: meters / second)
B. Velocity – speed and direction.
C. Average speed – distance traveled
divided by time taken.
D. Average velocity – the final position
minus the initial position divided by
the time interval considered.
E. When moving only in one direction (no
turning around) the average speed
and average velocity are the same.
The average velocity between t = 1 and t = 3 is?
A. -1 m/s
E. 2 m/s
B. 0.5 m/s
C. 1 m/s
D. -0.5 m/s
The average velocity between t = 1 and t = 2 is?
A. -1 m/s
E. 2 m/s
B. 0.5 m/s
C. 1 m/s
D. -0.5 m/s
Motion –Acceleration
A. Average acceleration - the final
velocity minus the initial velocity
divided by the time interval
considered. (MKS units:
meters / second / second)
B. If the velocity changes in value or
direction, the object is
accelerating.
The body is not accelerating from
A. 0 to 2 s
D. 2 to 4 s
B. 4 to 8 s
C. 11 to 12 s
E. 8 to 11 s
Fig. P2.17, p.51
Is the object following the blue line accelerating?
A. yes
B. no
C. not enough information
Is the object following the orange line accelerating?
A. yes
B. no
C. not enough information
Force and Mass
A. A force is a push or a pull (MKS units:
Newtons).
B. Force is an agent of change. A net
force produces a change in the motion
(acceleration).
C. Mass is the amount of stuff in a body
(MKS units: Kilograms).
D. A quart of water has a mass a little
more than a kilogram and it takes a
little over 10 Newtons to hold the
quart of water from falling.
Force – Newton’s Laws
I.
A body remains at rest or in a
state of uniform motion
(constant velocity) unless acted
on by a net force.
II. The net force on a body equals
the mass of the body times its
acceleration.
III. If body A acts on body B, then
body B acts back on body A with
a force of equal value, but
opposite in direction.
Force – Facts
A. Unbalanced forces produce a
change in the motion
(acceleration). This is the same
as a net force.
B. Balanced forces don’t produce a
change in the motion.
Force – Examples
A.
B.
C.
Because F = ma, the same force
acting on a small mass and a large
mass will produce the greater
acceleration on the smaller mass.
(Wacker Demo)
Because F = ma, a bigger force
acting on the same mass will produce
a greater acceleration.
The force of gravity produces a
constant acceleration.
Freefall
Velocity (m/s)
-9.8
-19.6
-29.4
-39.2
1
2
3
4
Time (s)
For an object at rest on a surface (e.g., a book on a table),
the surface (e.g., table) does not exert an upward force.
The 'force of motion' can be used up.
If an object is more active (moves faster) than another
object, it also has more force.
Falling Washers
Demonstration
What questions do you have
on the content readings?