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General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion
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General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

General Physics I: Day 11Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion

Page 2: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

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Fundamental Forces

We now understand (nearly) every object and behavior in the universe in terms of four fundamental forces:1. Gravity: The weakest of the four, but the most

prominent due to its range.2. Electromagnetism: Responsible for every day-to-

day force that isn’t gravity. Not generally noticed because most things are electrically neutral.

3. Strong Nuclear Force: Holds the nucleus together. Strongest force, but has a tiny range.

4. Weak Nuclear Force: Key to a few really important processes. (sunlight!)

Page 3: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

3WarmUp: Woman, rope & pulleyA 500 N woman sits in a seat that is suspended from a rope. The rope passes over a pulley suspended from the ceiling, and the woman holds the other end of the rope in her hands. What can we say about the magnitudes of the force of tension in the rope and the force that the seat exerts on the woman? (Hint: Draw a free-body diagram for the woman.)

Page 4: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

4WarmUp: Woman, rope & pulley~17% → The tension is 250 N, the force of the

seat on the woman is 250 N.

~17% → The tension is 500 N, the force of the seat on the woman is 250 N.

~13% → The tension is 250 N, the force of the seat on the woman is 500 N.

~54% → The tension is 500 N, the force of the seat on the woman is 500 N.

Page 5: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

Ropes & Pulleys

Because of Newton’s 3rd Law, we can say:The tension in a stationary continuous piece of rope is exactly the same everywhere in the rope.

If it is accelerating the force on the front end of the rope will have to be larger.

But, if we assume the rope is of negligible mass…The massless rope approximation lets us say that the tension is the same, even if there is acceleration.

Similarly, if a pulley is involved, it will not change the forces in the rope if it is massless and frictionless.

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Page 6: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

The Levi Strauss trademark shows two horses trying to pull apart a pair of pants. Suppose Levi had only one horse and attached the other side of the pants to a sturdy tree. Using only one horse would

A) cut the tension on the pants in half.

B) not change the tension on the pants at all.

C) double the tension on the pants.

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Page 7: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

Two blocks with the same mass are connected by a lightweight cord that runs through an ideal pulley. They are held in the positions shown. When released, the blocks will end up

A)at their current heights.

B) at the same height.

C) with block 1 on the ground.

D)with block 2 on the ground.

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1

2

Page 8: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

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Warm-Up: Broken Symmetry

Say you throw a baseball straight upward with speed v. What can you say about the ball's speed when it returns to your hand a) in the absence of air resistance?~75% → Returns at the same speed (symmetric!)~25% → Didn’t answer this question/confusedb) in the presence of air resistance?~17% → Returns at the same speed~75% → Returns at a smaller speed~8% → Didn’t answer this question/confused

Page 9: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

9Warm-Up: Broken Symmetry“a. with out air drag to affect the ball the speed of the ball should still be increased to around 7m/s when it returns to your hand. b. with air resistance he balls speed is slowed down with the force of the air pushing right back on the ball so its speed would be lower than 7m/s when it returned to your hand.”

“[…] With air resistance, the ball's speed will be slightly lower than when it left your hand because the ball has to travel and push its way through all those little air molecules, which requires more force.”

Page 10: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

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Fluid Resistance

Also called air resistance, air drag, drag, viscosity

Unlike kinetic friction, fluid resistance depends very strongly on the speed of the object, and the dependence even changes with speed!

Small objects, very slow

Bigger than golf ball, throwing speed or faster

k incorporates shape, size and fluid properties

D incorporates shape, size and density of fluid

f kv2f Dv

Page 11: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

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Air Resistance

In air it is easy to reach the high speed regime:

Crucial concept: Air resistance increases very quickly as an object goes faster!

Eventually it equals Fg… terminal speed!

Example: Calculate terminal speed for a penny falling flat (unrealistic). Assume

• 15.6 m/s, not bad, but a bit high (tumbling!).

2air res.F f Dv

Page 12: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

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Challenge: Drop with Drag

Sketch plots of position, velocity and acceleration vs. time for a ball dropped from the top of a very tall building in the presence if air resistance. Use down as positive.

Page 13: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

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Falling in Air

Page 14: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

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Sample Problem

A baseball (m = 145 g, r = 3.68 cm) is hit towards left field in a game in New York. At the top of the ball’s motion it is moving at 35 m/s. Find the acceleration of the ball at that moment. Assume .

Page 15: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

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The net force on a moving object suddenly becomes zero. The object then: 

A) stops abruptly.

B) stops during a short time interval.

C) changes direction.

D) continues at constant velocity.

E) slows down gradually.

Page 16: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

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Centripetal acceleration always points towards the center of the circle

What matters is speed and turning radius:

If you only go faster, acceleration is larger.If you only tighten your turn, acceleration is larger.

Centripetal acceleration is the amount of acceleration required for an object to go in a circle of radius r at speed v.

Centripetal Acceleration

2

c

va

r

Page 17: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

17Worked-Example: Circling Car

Find the maximum tension in the car as it goes around the circle at top speed.

vFT

R

Page 18: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

18Worked-Example: Circling Car1. Explain why the tension in the string is the

greatest when the car is going the fastest. When would the tension be the least?

Page 19: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

19Worked-Example: Circling Car2. In this problem the car is traveling on a

horizontal, level track, so the only force examined was the tension. What other forces act on the car and why were they neglected? If the car was instead traveling on a vertical loop would these forces need to be included in the calculations?

Page 20: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

20Worked-Example: Circling Car

Page 21: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

21Worked-Example: Circling Car

Page 22: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

Centripetal Force?

Lets apply Newton’s 2nd Law to this…

This net force is sometimes called the centripetal force, but it is not a new force!The net force (centripetal or not) can come from any force… friction, tension, gravity, the normal force, etc., depending on the situation.My advice: Avoid the phrase and definitely do not put it into your equations.

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22

c

mvF ma m r

r

Page 23: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

You’re a passenger in a racecar approaching a turn after a straight section. As the car turns left, you are pressed against the car door. Which is true during the turn?

A) A centripetal force pushes you against the door.

B) There is no force that pushes you against the door.

C) The frictional force of the ground pushes you against the door.

D) No force in the radial direction is acting on you.

E) You cannot analyze this situation in terms of the forces on you since you are accelerating.

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Page 24: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

Sample Problem - Banked CurveA car drives around a curve with radius 410 m at a speed of 32 m/s. The road is banked at 5.0°. The mass of the car is 1400 kg.

What is the frictional force on the car?

At what speed could you drive around this curve so that the force of friction is zero?

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Page 25: General Physics I: Day 11 Fundamental Forces, Drag, Ropes & Circular Motion.

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Coming up…Thursday (9/25) → Review for Exam 1

Tuesday (9/30) → Exam 1

Homework #5 due Saturday the 27th

Exam 1 is a next Tuesday (Deal offer expires!)

Sample questions posted online! Do these in “Test-like conditions” as diagnostic

Extra credit (+3% on Exam 1) posted Wednesday