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Activity 80: Newton’s Laws of Motion
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Challenge: What relationships between force and
motion did Newton discover?
Key Vocabulary:
 Balanced forces
 Unbalanced Forces
 Friction
 Net force
Getting Started

Read the introduction on page 29.

Remember that a force is a push or pull.


Complete the Before column for the “Anticipation
Guide: Laws of Motion”
Let’s get started
Stopping to Think #1

The heavy ball has more inertia because it would
take more force to change its motion than the light
one
Stopping to think #2

Without friction, a thrown baseball would continue
in a straight line at a constant speed forever, or
until it encountered another force that changes its
motion
Stopping to Think #3

The forces are balanced. The frictional forces within
the car and from the road are balanced by the
equal but opposite force applied by the engine.
The net force is zero, and the car travels with
constant speed and direction.
Stopping to Think #4

Yes, because the ratio of force to mass could be the
same for the two situations. For example, the
acceleration of 44 N/100 kg is the same as 4 N/1
kg.
Stopping the Think #5

The “reaction” force is your hand that applies an
equal and opposite force on the backpack.
However, it is impossible to say which of the two
forces is the “action” and which is the “reaction”
since they are applies simultaneously.
Vocabulary Review

Friction


Net force


The combined force acting on a system
Balanced force


The force that exists at the boundary between any two
pieces of matter
When all of the forces acting on an object equals zero,
there is no movement
Unbalanced forces

When all of the forces on an object do not equal zero;
there is movement
Answers to the Anticipation Guide
Analysis Questions 1, 3-5 in your notebooks.
(#2 will be a graded UC Assessment)
1.
Because there is no
friction in outer space,
an object in motion
remains in motion.
Once a shuttle leaves
the Earth’s atmosphere,
it needs very little fuel
to get to its
destination. It uses fuel
to change direction
(thrusters) or to land.
3.a. A 1,000 kg car
F = ma
1,000 N = 1,000 kg × a
1,000 𝑁
𝑎 =
1,000 𝑘𝑔
a = 1 m/s2
3b. A 2,000 kg car
F = ma
1,000 N = 2,000 kg × a
a = 1,000N / 2,000 kg
a = 0.5 m/s
4.
Newton’s third law states that forces come in equal
and opposite pairs. For every action force there is
an equal and opposite reaction force.
The balloon exerts a force on the air (action force),
causing the air to rush out the opening, while at the
same time the air exerts an equal and opposite
reaction force on the balloon, causing the balloon
to fly around the room
5.
People spend money on lubricants because they
reduce friction and less friction means that the
engine and the wheels move more smoothly (and
stay cooler).
This means that the engine needs to exert less
force, which often results in it lasting longer, using
less fuel, and requiring fewer repairs.