Motion and Forces
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Transcript Motion and Forces
Chapter 2: Motion
What could you do to change the
velocity of a soccer ball?
Explain how motion and force are
related.
Describe what inertia is and how it is
related to Newton’s first law of motion.
Identify the forces and motion that are
present during a car crash.
Force: A push
or a pull
Sometimes it is obvious that a force is
being applied.
Kicking a soccer ball
Sometimes it is not obvious
Force of the atmosphere pushing against you
Forces can cause the motion of an
object to change.
Example: hitting a baseball
Measure force in Newtons (N)
Force doesn’t always change
velocity.
Net Force: the sum of the forces
acting upon an object.
Balanced Forces: forces on an object
that are equal in size but opposite in
direction.
Net force = zero
Object does not move
Unbalanced Forces: unequal forces acting
on the same object.
Object moves in the direction of the larger
force
10 N
4N
10 N
8N
4N
4N
10 N
4N
Inertia: the tendency of an object to
resist any change in its motion.
If an object is moving, it will keep moving
at the same speed and in the same
direction unless an unbalanced force acts
on it.
If an object is at rest, it tends to remain
at rest unless an unbalanced force acts
on it.
Which has
greater inertia, a
truck or a hot
wheels car?
A greater force is needed to move the
truck than the hot wheels car.
The inertia of an object is related to its
mass.
The greater the mass of an object, the
greater its inertia.
Newton’s First Law of Motion: an
object moving at a constant velocity
keeps moving at that velocity unless
an unbalanced net force acts on it.
Sometimes called the law of inertia.
When a car traveling
about 50 km/h collides
head-on with something
solid, the car crumples,
slows down, and stops
within about 0.1 s.
What happens to any passenger not
wearing a safety belt?
They continue to move forward at the
same speed the car was traveling.
What is the net force on a
refrigerator if you push on the
refrigerator and it doesn’t move?