Chapter 3 - Mrs. Wiedeman
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Transcript Chapter 3 - Mrs. Wiedeman
Chapter 3
Forces
Section 1
Newton’s Second Law
Force, Mass and Acceleration
Compare hard thrown ball vs. gently tossed
ball
Force? Velocity? Acceleration?
Throw hard a baseball vs. softball
Who goes faster? Why?
Velocity and Acceleration depend on mass
Newton’s 2nd Law of Motion
Def: acceleration is in the same direction as net
force
Net Force
Net Force = mass x acceleration Fnet = ma
kg x m/s2 = N (Newton)
Practice!
Rocket has 28,913 N of thrust and a mass of
2,350 kg. What is the acceleration?
(frictionless surface)
What is the mass of a rocket that has a thrust
of 105 N and an acceleration of 70 m/s2?
Friction
Roll a ball in the parking lot…
Newton’s 1st law says ball will keep constant
speed
Stops because of friction (negative
acceleration – force is friction)
Def: force that opposes the sliding motion
Microwelds
Def: points where two surfaces come in to
contact
Larger force = stronger microwelds
Break microwelds = need force
Static Friction
Push box = doesn’t
move
Acceleration = 0 so net
force = 0
What’s canceling your
force?
Static Friction: force
prevents two surfaces
from sliding past each
other
Sliding Friction
Def: force that opposes
the sliding motion of
two surfaces
Stop pushing = box
stops
Rolling Friction
Car stuck in mud…
Def: frictional force between rolling object and
surface.
Air Resistance
Falling object pulled by
gravity – opposed by air
resistance
Def: friction like force
opposed motion as moves
through air
No air = objects fall with
same acceleration bowling
ball vs. feather
Terminal Velocity
Def: highest speed a
falling object will reach
When air resistance
balances downward
force
Depends on size, shape,
mass
Sky diver no parachute
vs. with parachute
Section 2
Gravity
What is gravity?
How would you throw a long pass with a
football?
Anything that has mass is attracted by gravity
Gravity: attractive force between two objects
that depends on masses and distance
Stronger force?
More mass/closer together
Gravity
We only feel earth’s gravitational force
1 of 4 Basic Forces
Others:
electromagnetic force – electricity and
magnetism
strong and weak nuclear force – inside nuclei
of atoms
Law of Universal Gravitation
Sir Isaac Newton
Earth’s Gravitational Acceleration
When only force acting on two things is
gravity – they fall at the same rate
Close to earth’s surface acceleration due to
gravity is 9.8 m/s2
Newton’s second law F = ma
Fgravity(N) = mass (kg) x acceleration of gravity (m/s2)
F = mg
Weight
Def: gravitational force on a object
Calculate your weight in N
Weightlessness and Free Fall
When you free fall gravity pulls everything at same
rate = no gravity
Spaceship in orbit experiences 90% of earth’s
gravity
Ship is in free fall in orbit = no gravity
Projectile Motion
Projectile: anything thrown or shot through air
Gravity causes path to be curved
Horizontal motion – throwing
Vertical motion – gravity
Horizontal and Vertical Distance
Same vertical distance = same mass = same
acceleration = same time
Different horizontal distance
Centripetal Force
Centripetal acceleration: acceleration towards the
center of a curved path.
Newton’s 2nd law – acceleration in direction of force
centripetal force
Anything moving in circle is because cent. force is
accelerating towards center
Gravity
Section 3
Newton’s 3rd Law of Motion
Newton’s 3rd Law
Def: when one object exerts a force on
another, the 2nd object exerts an equal but
opposite force
Action – Reaction
Jumping on trampoline
Action/Reaction Do NOT Cancel
Forces are equal, but acting on different objects
Act on water – reaction pushes forward = unbalanced
force
Rocket Propulsion
Rocket exerts force on gas backwards – gas exerts
force on rocket forwards
Momentum
How much force is needed to change motion?
Def: product of mass and velocity
Practice!
What is the momentum of a 1,300 kg car
traveling 28 m/s?
What is the velocity of a 0.15 kg baseball that
has a momentum of 6 kg m/s?
Force and Changing Momentum
Catch a foul ball bare handed?
Force and Changing Momentum
a = (vf – vi)
t
Put the two together:
When that baseball hits – calculate the force
F = ma
Force and Changing Momentum
What is the force of a 0.15 kg baseball with a
velocity of 40 m/s when it comes to a stop in 1
second?
Law of Conservation of Momentum
Momentum doesn’t change unless mass,
velocity or both change
Can be transferred – pool balls
Def: group of objects exerts forces only on
each other, their total momentum doesn’t
change
When Objects Collide
1st puck will give more
momentum to the 2nd puck in
the same direction
Moving towards each other
same speed = 0 momentum
Collide = 0 momentum –
moving same speed opposite
direction