Chapter 12: Forces and Motion
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Transcript Chapter 12: Forces and Motion
12.1
Forces
Objectives:
M 4-1
Describe examples of force and identify appropriate SI units used
to measure force.
10
M 4-2
Explain how the motion of an object is affected when balanced
and unbalanced forces act on it.
7
M 4-3
Compare and contrast the four kinds of friction.
15
M 4-4
Describe how gravity and air resistance affect falling objects.
8
FORCES
FORCE: a push or pull that
acts on an object
Measured in Newtons (N)
= a vector: shows direction
and magnitude
Net force: is the overall force
acting on an object after all
forces have been combined.
Balanced and Unbalanced Forces
Balanced forces: a net force of 0.
*No Motion
Unbalanced forces: net force not equal to 0.
* Causes motion
Examples of Forces
Electromagnetic Forces (between magnets,
protons/electrons)
Nuclear Forces (strong force) (holds the nucleus of an
atom together, nuclear energy, atomic bomb).
Centripetal Forces (changes the direction of an object and
causes it to move in a circle)
Friction
Gravity
Friction
A force that opposes the
motion of objects that touch
each other
Friction happens at the
surface of objects (where
they touch)
4 main types of friction:
Static, Sliding, Rolling, and
Fluid.
Friction between two surfaces
Static Friction
Acts on stationary objects.
Always acts in the direction that is opposite of an
applied force
Keeps an object from being moved across a surface
Stops acting on an object once the object is moving
Ex. Moving a piece of furniture on carpet.
Static Friction
Sliding Friction
Acts on an object once the object is moving
Goes against the direction in which the object is
moving as it slides on a surface
Occurs when two objects rub together
Less of a force than static friction
Rolling Friction
Force that acts on rolling (round) objects
Acts on the surface and at the point where the object is
touching something else (the ground for example)
Allows the object to touch the ground and not slip
Slows rolling objects down
Fluid Friction
Force that opposes an object’s motion through a fluid
(liquid or gas)
Force increases as the object’s speed through the fluid
increases
When fluid friction acts on objects moving through the
air, it is called air resistance.
Gravity
Force of attraction that acts between any two
masses.
Pulls objects together
The magnitude of the force is proportional to
the mass of the objects.
Ex. Gravitational pull between sun and earth
Gravitational pull between satellites and the
earth.
Gravity on earth
Pulls objects towards the earth at a rate of
9.8 m/s2
Gravity acts equally on ALL objects, pulling them at the
same rate towards the earth.
Objects fall towards the earth at different rates due to
air resistance (fluid friction).
Falling objects
TWO Forces acting on a falling object:
1. Gravity (pulling downward)
2. Air resistance (acts in opposition to gravity, reduces
acceleration)
Terminal velocity: when air resistance = force of
gravity
The object is no longer accelerating.
V= a x t speed of a falling object
Puzzle…
Myth or fact:
If you drop two basketballs with the same shape but
different masses (2 kg and 20kg), they will hit the
ground at the same time.
True or False, and why?