FORCES - Mr. Maloney
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Transcript FORCES - Mr. Maloney
FORCES
episode II
newton strikes back
Physics
Mr. Maloney
A new era of physics
Aristotle (384-322 BC) thought that objects were
naturally at rest, would always stop themselves
and a force was needed for any motion.
Descartes (1596-1650) thought that some unseen
vortex was constantly pushing on things to make
them stay in motion.
Galileo (1564-1642) realized that the Greeks
weren't accounting for forces such as friction.
Newton summarized Galileo's thoughts and
others through his three laws of motion.
© 2002 Mike Maloney
objectives
You will be able to
describe how mass, force and acceleration
are related to eachother.
describe the consequences of
Newton’s 2nd Law.
graph data to find a relationship between
variables.
Jump
to Post Lab
© 2002 Mike Maloney
Newton’s 2nd Law
Newton’s
2nd law describes how a mass
behaves when forces act on it.
We can guess these forces will produce a
change in motion but how are they related?
ILD 2.2 (1st part)
© 2002 Mike Maloney
Newton’s 2nd Law
How
does acceleration relate to force?
Lets do a little experiment together as a
class to find out.
Force Sensor
Accelerometer
© 2002 Mike Maloney
Newton’s 2nd Law
How does this acceleration relate
to the force?
The acceleration will be in the same direction
as the force.
The magnitude of the acceleration increases
as the force increases
The magnitude of the acceleration decreases
as the mass of the object increases
Recreate our lab using this sim.
© 2002 Mike Maloney
N2L with multiple objects
What
if there is more than one object
applying a force on some mass? What
is the effect now? (back to ILD)
It is not just one force that determines
how an object will change it motion, it is
the sum total of all forces acting on the
object … what we call NET FORCE.
Demos with 2 fans and 2 weights.
© 2002 Mike Maloney
Newton’s 2nd Law
In
mathematical terms
a = F/m
acceleration = net force / mass
or more commonly written
Force (net) = mass ∙ acceleration
F = m∙a
And since force and acceleration are
vectors, they will be in the same direction.
© 2002 Mike Maloney
MEASURING FORCES
The
unit of force is the Newton {N}
It is derived from its effect.
F = m*a [kg]*[m/s2]
1 N = 1 kg•m/s2
1 N is defined as the amount of force
required to accelerate 1 kg at a
rate of 1 m/s2.
© 2002 Mike Maloney
2nd Law Examples
Accelerating
a car vs. truck
Slowing down a car vs. truck
Jogging vs. sprinting
Pushing chair alone vs. someone in it
Freefall
© 2002 Mike Maloney
objectives
Can you
describe how mass, force and acceleration
are related to eachother.
describe the consequences of
Newton’s 2nd Law.
graph data to find a relationship between
variables.
Jump
to Post Lab
© 2002 Mike Maloney
APPENDIX
© 2002 Mike Maloney
Inertia
The
tendency of an object to resist a
change in motion is called its inertia.
Objects with greater masses generally
have greater inertias.
For our purposes, an object’s inertia is
basically measured by it mass.
BACK
© 2002 Mike Maloney
Net Force
NET FORCE refers to the vector sum total
of all forces acting on an object. It is often
expressed as F
For example, if there were two leftward forces
of 10 lb each, the NET FORCE would be 20
lb leftward.
If there were one 10 lb rightward force and
one 8 lb leftward force, the NET FORCE
would be 2 lb rightward.
What about if the forces were in X and Y?
BACK
© 2002 Mike Maloney
Applied Force
APPLIED
FORCE refers to a generic
force that is acting on an object.
An APPLIED FORCE is basically any
force that is not a WEIGHT, NORMAL
FORCE, FRICTIONAL FORCE,
SPRING FORCE, or other named force.
BACK
© 2002 Mike Maloney