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CH4: Forces and Newton's Laws of Motion Concepts of force, mass, and weight. Newton’s laws of motion. Newton’s law of gravitation. Friction: kinetic and static frictional forces Free-body-diagram: Identifying forces acting on an object
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CH4: Forces and Newton's Laws of Motion

Jan 02, 2016

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CH4: Forces and Newton's Laws of Motion. Concepts of force, mass, and weight. Newton’s laws of motion. Newton’s law of gravitation. Friction: kinetic and static frictional forces Free-body-diagram: Identifying forces acting on an object. 4.1  The Concept of Force. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: CH4: Forces  and Newton's Laws of Motion

CH4: Forces and Newton's Laws of Motion

Concepts of force, mass, and weight.Newton’s laws of motion.Newton’s law of gravitation.Friction: kinetic and static frictional forcesFree-body-diagram: Identifying forces acting on an object

Page 2: CH4: Forces  and Newton's Laws of Motion

4.1 The Concept of Force

In common usage, a force is a push or a pull.

Forces can be categorized as,

Contact forces and Non-Contact forces.

Page 3: CH4: Forces  and Newton's Laws of Motion

Mass

Mass is a measure of the amount of matter contained in an object.

Mass is a scalar quantity.

Page 4: CH4: Forces  and Newton's Laws of Motion

Newton's First Law Of Motion

An object continues in a state of rest or in a state of motion at a constant speed along a straight line, unless compelled to change that state by a net force.

The net force is the vector sum of all of the forces acting on the object.

Inertia is the natural tendency of an object to remain at rest or in motion at a constant speed along a straight line.

The mass of an object is a quantitative measure of inertia.

Page 5: CH4: Forces  and Newton's Laws of Motion

The net force on an object is the vector sum of all forces acting on that object.

Individual Forces Net Force

10 N4 N 6 N

Net Force

Page 6: CH4: Forces  and Newton's Laws of Motion

Individual Forces Net Force

3 N

4 N

5 N

64

Net Force

Page 7: CH4: Forces  and Newton's Laws of Motion

Pushing a Stalled Car

Page 8: CH4: Forces  and Newton's Laws of Motion

F

Mathematically, the net force is written as

where the Greek letter sigma denotes the vector sum.

Net Force

Page 9: CH4: Forces  and Newton's Laws of Motion

Inertial Reference FrameAn inertial reference frame is one in which Newton's laws of motion are valid.

The acceleration of an inertial reference frame is zero, so it moves with a constant velocity.

Earth can be considered as an inertial reference frame.

Page 10: CH4: Forces  and Newton's Laws of Motion

Newton's Second Law of Motion

mF

a

Newton’s second law is a relationship between acceleration, forces, and mass.

When a net external force acts on an object of mass m, the acceleration a that results is directly proportional to the net force and has a magnitude that is inversely proportional to the mass. The direction of the acceleration is the same as the direction of the net force.

aFm

SI Unit of Force: : kg · m/s2 = newton (N)

Page 11: CH4: Forces  and Newton's Laws of Motion

Units

Page 12: CH4: Forces  and Newton's Laws of Motion

4.4 The Vector Nature of Newton's Second Law of

Motion

Page 13: CH4: Forces  and Newton's Laws of Motion

4.5 Newton's Third Law of Motion

Whenever one body exerts a force on a second body, the second body exerts an oppositely directed force of equal magnitude on the first body.

Page 14: CH4: Forces  and Newton's Laws of Motion

 Examples of Newton's 3rd Law

Page 15: CH4: Forces  and Newton's Laws of Motion

Example 4

Astronauts use a tether to stay connected to the space capsule.

Suppose that the mass of the spacecraft in Figure 4.7 is mS = 11 000 kg and that the mass of the astronaut is mA = 92 kg. In addition, assume that the astronaut exerts a force of P = +36 N on the spacecraft. Find the accelerations of the spacecraft and the astronaut.