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Forces Chapter 3
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Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Dec 26, 2015

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Page 1: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Forces

Chapter 3

Page 2: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Newton’s 2nd law

• 2nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it

• A= net force/Mass

• a= Fnet/m

• A force on an object is equal to the change in momentum of the object

• Force = mass * accel. • F=m*a

Page 3: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Practice

• Your push your friends trike with a force of 150N, his mass is 35kg the trikes is 15kg, what is the acceleration?

• 150N/50kg=• 3m/s/s

Page 4: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Friction

• Friction is the force that opposes motion between two opposing surfaces

• Friction always acts against motion

• Causes of friction – unsmooth surface, deformations, molecular attraction

Page 5: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

2 types of friction

• Static friction – force of a resting object

• Sliding or Kinetic friction - force on a moving object

• Rolling Friction-Ever notice how it takes

more force to get an object moving

                           

   

Page 6: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Types of Friction

• Static friction – force of a resting object

• Sliding or Kinetic friction - force on a moving object

• Rolling Friction- Friction or a rolling object –similar to kinetic friction

Page 7: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Stuff falls

• Apollo 15 Hammer/Feather gravity demonstration – Google

• http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/image/featherdrop_sound.mov

• All objects near the surface of the earth accelerate at a rate of 9.8m/s/s

• Objects of different masses will fall at the same rate regardless of their mass

Page 8: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.
Page 9: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Gravitational acceleration

• Velocity of a freefalling object can be found with the formula v= g*t

• Where gravities acceleration is 9.8m/s/s

• How can you find falling distance

• D= ½ g *t2

Page 10: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Air resistance

• When drag is equal to weight, there is no net external force on the object.

• The object then falls at a constant velocity as described by Newton's first law of motion.

• The constant velocity is called the terminal velocity.

• This is due to the air resistance – Friction force caused when objects fall through air

• Dependant upon the speed, shape, mass, and size of the object, and the density of the air.

Page 11: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Where is he falling fastest?Where is accelerating the most?Where is he not accelerating?

Page 12: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

More massive objects fall faster than less massive objects because they are acted upon by a larger force of gravity; for this reason, they accelerate to higher

speeds until the air resistance force equals the gravity force. 

Page 13: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Centripetal

• Centripetal acceleration: acceleration toward the center of a curved path

• Centripetal means center seeking- it is merely a net force

Page 14: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Centripetal ex.

As a car makes a turn, the force of friction acting upon the turned wheels of the car provide the centripetal force required for circular motion.

As a bucket of water is tied to a string and spun in a circle, the force of tension acting upon the bucket provides the centripetal force required for circular motion

As the moon orbits the Earth, the force of gravity acting upon the moon provides the centripetal force required for circular motion

Page 15: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Weight

• Weight – The measure of the force of gravity on a body.

• On earth your weight in Newtons (N) is equal to your mass in kg times gravity’s acceleration (9.8m/s2)

• W= m * g

Page 16: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Weightlessness

• Weightlessness is sensation experienced when there are no external objects touching one's body and exerting a push or pull

Page 17: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

• Astronauts on the orbiting space shuttle are weightless because..

• a. there is no gravity in space and they do not weigh anything.

• b. space is a vacuum and there is no gravity in a vacuum.

• c.  space is a vacuum and there is no air resistance in a vacuum.

• d. the astronauts are far from earth's surface at a location where gravitation has a minimal effect.

Page 18: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Freefallin’

• Orbit is a state of constant freefall – the Earth’s surface is falling away at the same rate of orbit

• 400 km above the earth's surface, then the value of g at that location will have been reduced from 9.8 m/s/s (at earth's surface) to approximately 8.7 m/s/s

Page 19: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Projectile motion

• Projectile motion: Anything that has horizontal motion is a projectile

• Horizontal and vertical motion act independently of one another-

• Projectiles follow a path called a trajectory

Page 20: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.
Page 21: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

So a bullet dropped and a bullet fired from the same height will hit the ground at the same time.

Page 22: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.
Page 23: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Newton’s 3rd law

• For every action (force) in nature there is an equal and opposite reaction.

• Force pairs: Action and reaction forces do not act on the same object.

• What would happen if they did?

Page 24: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Many reaction forces are not noticed due to other forces or smaller accelerations.

Introduction to Rocket Performance - Level 3 - Jump Animation

Page 25: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.
Page 26: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Mometum

• Momentum: property of a moving object based on its velocity and mass.

• p = mv• kg x m/s – label

Page 27: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Momentum is conserved

• Law of Conservation of Momentum: Momentum may be exchanged but the total amount of momentum remains the same.

Page 28: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

In a game of pool where is the momentum lost

Page 29: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Practice

• A scooter and a big red truck, both moving at 20m/s. Which has more momentum.

• Mass of red truck 3000kg

• Mass of scooter 8kg• Momentum of truck:• of Scooter:

Page 30: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Force and momentum

• Objects with momentum can apply force to other objects when they strike each other

• F=mvf – mvi/t

• This is a formula combining the 2nd and 3rd laws

• A baseball strikes your glove with a velocity of 49m/s, its mass is .145kg. The ball comes to a stop in .01s. What force is applied?

Page 31: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Artificial Satellite vs. Natural Satellite

• Sputnik: 1957 Russian (October 4th) “Fellow Traveler or Satellite”

• What do we use satellites for?

• Weather TV Communications Science and Research

Page 32: Forces Chapter 3. Newton’s 2 nd law 2 nd – an object accelerates in the direction of the net force acting upon it A= net force/Mass a= Fnet/m A force.

Satellites

• How many satellites currently orbit the earth?

• Geosynchronous Satellites: Orbital speed matches the earth’s rotation

• Where? 35,790 km above the equator.

• International Space Station: 390km