Top Banner
Chapter 13: Universal Gravitation This cartoon mixes two leg 1. The legend of Newton, t & gravity which led to Universal Law of Gravi 2. The legend of William T the apple.
12

Chapter 13: Universal Gravitation This cartoon mixes two legends: 1. The legend of Newton, the apple & gravity which led to the Universal Law of Gravitation.

Dec 28, 2015

Download

Documents

Oscar Walsh
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Chapter 13: Universal Gravitation This cartoon mixes two legends: 1. The legend of Newton, the apple & gravity which led to the Universal Law of Gravitation.

Chapter 13: Universal Gravitation

This cartoon mixes two legends: 1. The legend of Newton, the apple & gravity which led to the Universal Law of Gravitation.

2. The legend of William Tell & the apple.

Page 2: Chapter 13: Universal Gravitation This cartoon mixes two legends: 1. The legend of Newton, the apple & gravity which led to the Universal Law of Gravitation.

• It was very SIGNIFICANT & PROFOUND in the 1600's when Sir Isaac Newton first wrote

Newton's Universal Law of Gravitation! • This was done at the young age of about 30. It was this, more than any of his achievements,

which caused him to be well-known in the world scientific community of the late 1600's.

• He used this law, along with Newton's 2nd Law (his 2nd Law!) plus Calculus, which he also (co-) invented, to PROVE that the orbits of the planets around the sun must be ellipses. – For simplicity, we will assume in Ch. 13 that these orbits are circular.

• Ch. 13 fits THE COURSE THEME OF NEWTON'S LAWS OF MOTION because he used his Gravitation Law & his 2nd Law in his

analysis of planetary motion. • His prediction that planet orbits are elliptical is in excellent agreement with

Kepler's analysis of observational data & with Kepler's empirical laws of planetary motion.

Page 3: Chapter 13: Universal Gravitation This cartoon mixes two legends: 1. The legend of Newton, the apple & gravity which led to the Universal Law of Gravitation.

• When Newton first wrote the

Universal Law of Gravitation,

this was the first time, anyone had EVER written a theoretical expression (physics in math form) & used it to PREDICT something that is in agreement with observations! For this reason,

Newton's formulation of his Universal Gravitation Law is considered

THE BEGINNING OF THEORETICAL PHYSICS. • This also gave Newton his major “claim to fame”. After this, he was

considered a “major player” in science & math among his peers.

• In modern times, this, plus the many other things he did, have led to the consensus that Sir Isaac Newton was the

GREATEST SCIENTIST WHO EVER LIVED

Page 4: Chapter 13: Universal Gravitation This cartoon mixes two legends: 1. The legend of Newton, the apple & gravity which led to the Universal Law of Gravitation.

• This is an EXPERIMENTAL LAW describing the gravitational force of attraction between 2 objects.

• Newton’s reasoning:

the Gravitational force of attraction between 2 large objects (Earth - Moon, etc.) is the SAME force as the attraction of objects to the Earth.

• Apple story: This is likely not a true historical account, but the reasoning discussed there is correct. This story is probably legend rather than fact.

Sect. 13.1: Newton’s Universal Law of Gravitation

Page 5: Chapter 13: Universal Gravitation This cartoon mixes two legends: 1. The legend of Newton, the apple & gravity which led to the Universal Law of Gravitation.

• The Force of Attraction between 2 small masses is the same as as the force between Earth & Moon, Earth & Sun, etc.

This must be true from

Newton’s 3rd Law

Page 6: Chapter 13: Universal Gravitation This cartoon mixes two legends: 1. The legend of Newton, the apple & gravity which led to the Universal Law of Gravitation.

• Newton’s Universal Law of Gravitation: “Every particle in the Universe attracts every other particle in the Universe with a force that is proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them:

F12 = -F21 [(m1m2)/r2]

Direction of this force:

Along the line joining the 2 masses

Must be true from Newton’s 3rd Law

Page 7: Chapter 13: Universal Gravitation This cartoon mixes two legends: 1. The legend of Newton, the apple & gravity which led to the Universal Law of Gravitation.

Newton’s Universal Gravitation Law• This is written as:

G a constant, the Universal Gravitational Constant

G is measured & is the same for ALL objects. G must be small!

1 22g

mmF G

r

• Measurement of G in the lab is tedious & sensitive because it is so small. – First done by Cavendish in 1789.

• Modern version of Cavendish experiment: Two small masses are fixed at ends of a light horizontal rod. Two larger masses were placed near the smaller ones.

• The angle of rotation is measured.

• Use N’s 2nd Law to get vector force between the masses. Relate to angle of rotation & can extract G.

Measurement

Apparatus

Page 8: Chapter 13: Universal Gravitation This cartoon mixes two legends: 1. The legend of Newton, the apple & gravity which led to the Universal Law of Gravitation.

F = G[(m1m2)/r2]• G = the Universal Gravitational Constant

• Measurements Find, in SI Units:

G = 6.673 10-11 N∙m2/kg2

• The force given above is strictly valid only for:

– Very small masses m1 & m2 (point masses)

– Uniform spheres

• For other objects: Need integral calculus!

Page 9: Chapter 13: Universal Gravitation This cartoon mixes two legends: 1. The legend of Newton, the apple & gravity which led to the Universal Law of Gravitation.

• The Universal Law of Gravitation is an example of an inverse square law– The magnitude of the force varies as the inverse

square of the separation of the particles

• The law can also be expressed in vector form

The negative sign means it’s an attractive force• Aren’t we glad it’s not repulsive?

1 212 122

ˆmmG

rF r

Page 10: Chapter 13: Universal Gravitation This cartoon mixes two legends: 1. The legend of Newton, the apple & gravity which led to the Universal Law of Gravitation.

12F

21F

Comments

1 212 122

ˆmmG

rF r

12 21F F

Force exerted by particle 1 on particle 2

Force exerted by particle 2 on particle 1

This tells us that the forces form a Newton’s 3rd Law action-reaction pair, as expected.

The negative sign in the above vector equation tells us thatparticle 2 is attracted toward particle 1

Page 11: Chapter 13: Universal Gravitation This cartoon mixes two legends: 1. The legend of Newton, the apple & gravity which led to the Universal Law of Gravitation.

More Comments

1 212 122

ˆmmG

rF r

• Gravitation is a “field force” that always exists between two masses, regardless of the medium between them.

• The gravitational force decreases rapidly as the distance between the two masses increases– This is an obvious consequence of the

inverse square law

Page 12: Chapter 13: Universal Gravitation This cartoon mixes two legends: 1. The legend of Newton, the apple & gravity which led to the Universal Law of Gravitation.

• 3 billiard balls, masses m1 = m2 = m3 = 0.3 kg are on a table as in the figure. Triangle sides: a = 0.4 m, b = 0.3 m,

c = 0.5 m. Calculate the magnitude & direction of the total gravitational force F on m1 due to m2 & m3.

Note: The gravitational force is a vector, so we have to add the vectors F21 & F31 to get the vector F (using the vector addition methods

of earlier).

F = F21 + F31

Using components, Fx = F21x + F31x

Fy = F21y + F31y

Example 13.1: Billiards