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Chapter 10
Section 1 –
The Nature of Force
Force
- a push or pull
Like
velocity and acceleration, a force is
described by its strength and by the
direction in which it acts.
SI unit Newton
The combination of all forces acting on
an object is called the net force.
Chapter 10
Section 1 –
The Nature of Force
Unbalanced Forces - acting on an object will
change the object’s motion
Unbalanced forces acting on an object result
in a net force and cause a change in the
object’s motion.
Equal forces acting on one object in opposite
directions are called balanced forces.
Balanced Forces - acting on an object will not
change the object’s motion
Chapter 10
Section 2 –
Friction and Gravity
Friction
- The force that two surfaces
exerts on each other when they rub
against each other.
The
strength of the force of friction
depends on two factors: how hard the
surfaces push together and the types of
surfaces involved.
Chapter 10
Section 2 – Friction (cont.)
Types of friction
– Static Friction – Friction that acts on objects that
are not moving
– sliding friction - objects slide against each other
– rolling friction - object is round or has wheels
– fluid friction - object moves through fluid
(swimming)
Is friction bad?
ice, walking, car, bike
Chapter 10
Section 2 – Gravity
The force that pulls objects toward Earth
Law of Universal Gravitation - The force of
gravity acts between all objects in the
universe.
Too factors affect the gravitational attraction
between objects: mass and distance.
Mass - measure of the amount of matter in an
object
Inverse relationship between distance
between object and their gravitaional pull
Chapter 10
Section 2 – Gravity (cont.)
Weight - measure of the force of gravity on an
object
Earth vs. Moon
Weight (Newtons) = mass x 9.8m/sec2
Chapter 10
Section 2 - Gravity (cont.)
Free fall - only gravity acting on the object (in a
vacuum)
In free fall, the force of gravity is an unbalnced force,
which causes an object to accelerate.
Acceleration due to Gravity = 9.8 m/s2
Air Resistance - Objects falling through the air
experience a type of fluid friction
Terminal velocity – The greatest velocity a
falling object reaches
air resistance forces balanced with gravity
Section 2 – Gravity (cont.)
Projectile – An object that is thrown
Projectile motion –throw object horizontally
(football, soccer)
Chapter 10
Section 3 –
Newton’s First & Second Laws
Newton’s First Law of Motion
An object at rest will remain at rest, and
an object that is moving at a constant
velocity will continue moving at constant
velocity, unless it is acted upon by an
unbalanced force.
Chapter 10
Section 3 –
Newton’s First Law
Inertia
- the tendency of an object to
resist a change in it’s motion
Direct relationship between mass and
inertia.
(One can say that mass is a measure of
an objects inertia.)
Chapter 10
Section 3 –
Newton’s Second Law
Newton’s Second Law of Motion
The acceleration of an object is directly
proportional to force and inversely
proportional to mass.
Acceleration = Net Force/Mass
Force = Mass x Acceleration
Chapter 10
F=ma
Section 3 –
Newton’s Second Law
Mass
- the amount of matter in an
object
(SI units = kilogram (kg))
Force = Newtons (N),
Mass=kilograms (kg), Acceleration =
m/sec2
Sample Problems pg.351
Chapter 10
Section 4 –
Newton’s Third Law (cont.)
Newton’s Third Law of Motion
If one object exerts a force on another object,
then the second object exerts a force of equal
strength in the opposite direction on the first
object.
Chapter 10
Section 4 –
Newton’s Third Law (cont.)
– pg. 354 Gymnast,
kayaker, dog (Squid, skater, kick,
walking)
Action Reaction Pairs
Motion?
Forces cancel? Volleyball pg.355
Action-Reaction
Chapter 10
Section 4 –
Momentum
Newton called momentum an objects quantity
of motion
The momentum of a moving object can be
determined by multiplying the object’s mass
and velocity.
Momentum = mass x velocity
– Sample problems pg.356
Chapter 10
Section 4 –
Momentum (cont.)
Law
of Conservation of Momentum
The total momentum of any group of
objects remains the same (is
conserved), unless outside forces act
on the objects.
Train
examples - overheads pg.358
Chapter 10
Section 5 –
Orbiting Satellites
Rocket
lift off - Newton’s third law gasses expelled with a downward force,
exert an equal but opposite force
upward on the rocket.
Satellite - any object that orbits another
object in space
centripetal force - any force that causes
an object to move in a circular path
Chapter 10
Section 5 –
Orbiting Satellites (cont.)
satellites
in orbit around the Earth
continually fall toward Earth, but
because Earth is curved they travel
around it pg.364
Satellite Motion
Satellite location – LEO,
Geo Synchronous
Chapter 10
Chapter 10 Vocabulary
force
net force
inertia
Newton’s first law
Newton’s second law
Newton’s third law
Friction
Static Friction
Sliding Friction
Rolling Friction
Fluid Friction
gravity
Mass
Weight
Free fall
Air resistance
Terminal velocity
Projectile
momentum
conservation of
momentum
satellite
centripetal force
Chapter 10