Motion and Forces
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Transcript Motion and Forces
Motion and Forces
Ch. 8.3 Newton’s Laws of Motion
Section 8.3 Objectives
State Newton’s three laws of motion, and apply them to
physical situations.
Calculate force, mass, and acceleration with Newton’s second
law.
Recognize that the free-fall acceleration near Earth’s surface
is independent of the mass of the falling object.
Explain the difference between mass and weight.
Identify paired forces on interacting objects.
Newton’s First Law
Newton's 1st Law States :
An object at rest remains at rest and
an object in motion maintains its
velocity unless it experiences an
unbalanced force.
Newton’s 1st Law is also known as
the Law of Inertia.
Inertia is the tendency of an
object to remain at rest or in
motion with a constant velocity.
Newton’s Second Law
Newton’s
2nd
Law States:
The unbalanced force acting
on an object equals the
object’s mass times its
acceleration.
This means :
force = mass x acceleration
F = ma
Where :F is in Newton’s (N)
m is in kilograms ( kg)
a is in meters per second squared (m/s2)
Free fall and Weight
Free fall is the motion of a
body when only the force of
gravity is acting on it.
Weight is the force on an object
due to gravity.
Weight equals mass times free
Free fall acceleration near
fall acceleration or w = mg.
Earth’s surface constant.
Weight is a force and has SI
Disregarding air resistance, all
objects on Earth’s surface
(regardless of their mass)
accelerate at 9.8 m/s2.
units of Newtons (N).
Terminal Velocity
Terminal velocity is the
maximum velocity reached
by a falling object that
occurs when the resistance
of the medium is equal to
the force due to gravity.
At terminal velocity, air
resistance and force of
gravity are equal. Sky
divers reach a terminal
velocity of about 320 km/h
(200 mi/h).
Newton’s Third Law
Newton’s Third Law states:
For every action force,
there is an equal and
opposite reaction force.
Forces always occur in
pairs but act on different
objects.
The upward push on the rocket
equals the downward push on the
exhaust gases.
Section 8.3 Summary
An object at rest remains at
rest and an object in
motion maintains a
constant velocity unless it
experiences an unbalanced
force (Newton’s 1st law).
The unbalanced force
acting on an object equals
the object’s mass times its
acceleration, or F = ma
(Newton’s 2nd Law).
The SI unit for force is the
Newton (N). Weight equals
mass times free fall
acceleration, or W = mg.
For every action force,
there is an equal and
opposite reaction force
(Newton’s 3rd law).