Chapter 3 Notes
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Chapter 3
Forces
Section 3.1: Newton’s 2nd Law
2nd Law of Motion: describes how
force, mass, and acceleration are
related
Formula: force = mass x acceleration
F=mxa
Newtons (N): unit for force
Example Problem: How much force is
needed to accelerate a 1000 kg car 3
m/sec/sec?
2nd Law Practice Problems
1. How much force is needed to accelerate a 1400 kg
car 2 m/s/s?
2. If a 70 kg swimmer pushes off a wall with a force of
250 N, at what rate will the swimmer accelerate
from the wall?
3. A dancer lifts his partner above his head with an
acceleration of 2.5 m/s/s. The dancer exerts a
force of 200 N. What is the mass of the partner?
Friction: force that opposes motion
Microwelds: source of friction
Static Friction: no movement
Sliding Friction: solid objects slide
over each other
Rolling Friction: friction between
rolling object and surface it’s rolling
on.
Air Resistance: opposes the force
of gravity
Makes objects slow down
Terminal Velocity
Because forces are
balanced, skydiver has
reached terminal
velocity.
The downward
force of gravity
equals the upward
force of air
resistance.
When these forces
are balanced,
object no longer
accelerates, it falls
at a constant
speed.
Section 3.2: Gravity
Newton’s Law of Gravitation: force of
attraction that exists between all
objects in the universe
The size of the gravitational force
between 2 objects depends on…
Masses
Distances between them
Falling Objects
All objects fall at the same rate:
9.8 m/s/s
Example Problem: A student drops a
penny from the top of the school
building. If it takes 5 seconds for the
penny to hit the ground, what is the
speed of the penny just before
impact?
Multiflash photography shows that
each ball has the same acceleration
downward (9.8 m/s/s) whether it’s
thrown or dropped.
Weight & Mass
Weight: gravitational force exerted
on an object (N)
Mass: measure of how much matter
is in an object (kg)
Formula: weight(N) = mass (kg) x
acceleration due to gravity (m/s/s)
Example Problem
What is the weight of a person with a
mass of 50 kg?
Remember: Earth’s acceleration of
gravity is 9.8 m/s/s.
weight(N) = mass x gravity
1. A man has a mass of 75 kg on the
Earth. What is his weight?
2. Find the acceleration of gravity on a
planet if a person with a mass of 66
kg weighs 646.8 N on that planet.
3. A person weighs 500 N on the Earth.
What is the person’s mass?
Projectile Motion
The path of a projectile is curved
because of gravity.
Centripetal Force
When an object moves in a circular
path, it accelerates towards the
center of the circle because of
centripetal force.
Facts About Gravity
The size of the gravitational force
between 2 objects depends on…
Masses
Distances between them
As you go farther from earth, weight
decreases.
With no air resistance, a penny & a
feather fall at the same rate.
Objects in free fall seem to be
weightless.
Elevator is in free fall.
Scale shows
Scale shows boy’s
weight
zero weight
Lab:
Finding Acceleration Due to Gravity
Trial
Time for 20 swings
(sec)
1
54.62
2
54.25
3
54.48
Find average value of T
Length = 1.84 m
T
Time of 1 swing
Formula
Problem Set-Up
Answer + Label
Section 3.3: Newton’s 3rd Law
3rd Law of Motion: every action has an
equal and opposite reaction
All forces come in pairs.
Examples:
Walking: feet push floor, floor pushes back
Flight of a bird: bird exerts force on air and air
pushes back
Rocket: gases move down and rocket moves up
Momentum
Formula: p = mass x velocity
Unit for momentum: kg-m/s
Law of Conservation of Momentum:
momentum isn’t created or destroyed
Momentum can be transferred from one
object to another in a collision
Momentum Practice Problems
1. An athletic has a mass of 100 kg and a velocity
of 8 m/s. What’s the athlete’s momentum?
2. What is the mass of a person walking at a speed
of 1 m/s if their momentum is 60 kg-m/s?
3. What is the velocity of an object that has a mass
of 175 kg and a momentum of 1750 kg-m/s?