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Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5
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Page 1: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

Inertia and Newton’s 1st Law of Motion

Chapter 2.2 + 2.5

Page 2: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

Inertia• Galileo found that a force is required to start

and object moving, but once moving, no force is required to keep it moving.

• The tendency of objects that are moving to stay moving and objects at rest to stay at rest is called Inertia

Page 3: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

Newton’s First Law of Motion• Sir Isaac Newton (1642 – 1727) was able to

state rules describing the effect of forces on motion of objects that are still true today.

• These rules are known as:

Newton’s Laws of Motion

• Newton’s First Law of Motion is also called

The Law of Inertia

Page 4: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

Newton’s First Law of Motion• An object moving at a constant velocity

keeps moving at that velocity unless a net force acts on it.

• If an object is at rest, it will stay at rest, unless a net force acts on it.

• If an object is in motion, it will stay in motion, unless a net force acts on it.

Page 5: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

What Happens in a Crash?

• Newton’s Law First Law of Motion• If you are traveling at 50 kilometers per hour

and you hit a tree…

Page 6: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

What Happens in a Crash?

• If you are not wearing your seatbelt…• The car is stopped by the tree and you continue

to move forward at a speed of 50 kilometers per hour until you hit the dashboard, steering wheel, windshield, etc.

• You would hit at the same speed you would reach if you fell from a three-story building.

Page 7: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

What Happens in a Crash?

• The seatbelt loosens a little upon impact and will hold you.

• If you are wearing your seatbelt…• This allows your body to be slowed down

gradually and decreases the unbalanced force placed on your body.

• The seatbelt could also save you from being thrown outside the car.

Page 8: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

Speed and VelocityChapter 2.3 + 2.4

Page 9: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

Speed• Galileo was the first to measure speed by

conidering the distance covered and the time it takes.

• He defined speed as the distance covered per unit of time.– The term per means “divided by”

• The equation we use to define speed is:

Speed =

Distance

Time

Page 10: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

• Suppose you ran 2 km in 10 min.– What is your rate?

S = d/t

S= 2 km /10 min.

S= 0.2 km/min.

Remember the units!!!

Page 11: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

Constant Speed…• What does constant mean?

• If you are driving on the highway and you set your cruise control, you are driving at a constant speed.

• What would a constant speed graph look like?

Page 12: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

Constant Speed Graph

Page 13: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

Constant Speed• Now think about how an object’s distance

changes over time when moving at a constant speed…

Page 14: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

Two Objects with Constant Speed

• Which one is going faster?

• A steeper gradient indicates a larger distance moved in a given time. In other words, higher speed.

• This means the object represented by the yellow line has a greater speed.

Page 15: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

Do you always go the same speed?

• No! Most of the time you are increasing speed, decreasing speed, or stopping completely!

• Think about driving a car or riding a bike!

Page 16: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

What is average speed?• Total distance traveled over the total time of

travel

• How do you find an average?- Take the total distance traveled and divide it by the total time of travel

Page 17: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

What is average speed?• How do you find an average?

• Average speed is the total distance traveled over the total time

• Avg. Speed = Total d / Total t• Avg S = Td/Tt

Page 18: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

What is Instantaneous speed?• What does a speedometer in a car do?

– It shows how fast a car is going at one point in time or at one instant.

• Instantaneous speed is the speed at a given point in time.

Page 19: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

What is Velocity?• Speed is how fast something is moving.• Velocity is how fast something is moving and in

what direction it is moving.• Why is this important?

– Hurricanes– Airplanes

Page 20: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

Speed or Velocity?

• If a car is going around a racetrack, its speed may be constant (the same), but its velocity is changing because it is changing direction.

Page 21: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

Speed or Velocity?• Escalators have

the same speed (constant), but have different velocities because they are going in different directions.

Page 22: Inertia and Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion Chapter 2.2 + 2.5.

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