forces_newton1_phy1151
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Forces & Newton 1
What Is a Force?
• A Force is an interaction between
two bodies.
– Convention: Fa,b means
“the force acting on a due to b”.
• A Force is a push or a pull.
• A Force has magnitude & direction
(vector).
• Adding forces means adding vectors.
Forces - 1151
• Contact (fundamentally E+M)
– Normal: Perpendicular to surface
– Friction: Parallel to surface
– Anything touching the object
• Rope: Tension
• Spring F = -kx
• Person
Physics
• Non-Contact or Action at a Distance
(these are field forces)
– Gravity
g
• Force
Force & Mass
– Symbol: F or F
– Units:
• SI – Newton (N) (~0.22 lb)
• English – Pound (lb)
• cgs – dyne (10-5 N)
• Mass
– Symbol: m or M
– Units:
• SI – kilogram (kg)
• English – slug (~14.5 kg)
• cgs – gram (g)
Weight Compared to Mass
• Weight is a Force
On Earth
– Depends on the gravitational
W = (9.8N/kg) m
field strength at the location
• Mass is the amount of “stuff”
– Mass is independent of location! (although it
is often measured by comparing weights)
– Mass is also the inertia of the object
• Inertia is resistance to a change in
motion – See Newton 1
Remember
1. Every force must have an agent that
produces it;
2. Every contact force must act only at the
point of contact;
3. The normal force acts only perpendicular to
the surface in contact;
4. The friction force acts only parallel to the
surface in contact;
5. The tension force from a string or rope acts
only along the line of the string or rope.
Tension
• Spring scale reads the force exerted on
each end.
• Tension is force transmitted by rope and
is the force exerted by each end of rope.
Tension ACT
A pair of tug-of-war teams are pulling on the ends of a
rope, each team with a force of 1000 N. The tension in the
rope is:
A. 2000 N
B. 500 N
C. 1000 N
D. 0 N
E. 2000 kg
Tension ACT
a. T1>T2
b. T1=T2
c. T1<T2
d. depends on pulley radius
Free Body Diagrams
Drawing a FBD
Identify all forces acting on the object.
Draw a coordinate system. Use the axes
defined in your pictorial representation. If those
axes are tilted, for motion along an incline, then
the axes of the free-body diagram should be
similarly tilted.
Represent the object as a dot at the origin of
the coordinate axes. This is the particle model.
Draw vectors representing each of the
identified forces. Be sure to label each force
vector.
Examples of Force Vectors
Pull
(contact force)
Push
(contact force)
Gravity
(long-range force)
Identifying Forces
Identify “the system” and “the environment.” The system is the
object whose motion you wish to study; the environment is everything
else.
Draw a picture of the situation. Show the object—the system—and
everything in the environment that touches the system. Ropes,
springs, and surfaces are all parts of the environment.
Draw a closed curve around the system. Only the object is inside
the curve; everything else is outside.
Locate every point on the boundary of this curve where the
environment touches the system. These are the points where the
environment exerts contact forces on the object.
Name and label each contact force acting on the object. There is
at least one force at each point of contact; there may be more than
one. When necessary, use subscripts to distinguish forces of the
same type.
Name and label each long-range force acting on the object. For
now, the only long-range force is weight.
Forces on a Bungee Jumper
y
T
w
x
The Forces on a Skier
n
T
fk
w
The Forces on a Rocket
Fthrust
y
D w
x
Inertial Reference Frame
• The following statements can be thought
of as the definition of inertial reference
frames.
– An IRF is a reference frame that is not
accelerating (or rotating) with respect to the
“fixed stars”.
– If one IRF exists, infinitely many exist since
they are related by any arbitrary constant
velocity vector!
Newton 1
• Newton’s First Law
• An object subject to no external
forces is at rest or moves with a
constant velocity if viewed from an
inertial reference frame.
– If no net forces act, there is no
acceleration.
F net 0 a 0