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PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites
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Page 1: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

PHS 116

Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites

Page 2: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Activity 1

[Gravity and reaction time]

Page 3: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Sir Isaac Newton

Did not “discover” gravity

First to realize that gravity is not confined to Earth

Forces must act on the planets

Netwonian synthesis

Page 4: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

4.1 Universal Law of Gravity

Newton: The moon “falls” away from straight line motion

Page 5: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Law of Universal Gravitation

After observing Halley’s comet Came up with this relationship

F ~ mass1 x mass2

(distance)2

Page 6: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

The Universal Gravitational Constant (G)

F ~ mass1 x mass2

(distance)2

F = G mass1 x mass2

(distance)2

G = 6.67 x 10-11 N m2/kg2

That’s 0.0000000000667

Page 7: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Henry Cavendish First to

calculate “G” independently

G = __F___

(m1m2/d2)

Page 8: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Sample Problem: Use “G” to calculate the mass of the Earth!

Assume you have a 1 kg mass.F = 9.8 N (we round to 10 usually)G = 6.67 x 10-11 N m2/kg2

m2 = 1 kgd = Earth’s radius = 6.4 x 106 m

[on board]

Page 9: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

4.2 Effect of Distance on Gravity

Gravity is weak to begin withweakest of the four fundamental forcesgravity, electromagnetic, weak & strong

nuclear forces As distance increases, gravity falls off by

1/d2

Similar example: spray paint

Page 10: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

9

1/9

16

1/16

Page 11: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Worksheet

page 27

Page 12: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Distance

Refers to the distance between the “center of mass” for the two objects

The greater an object’s distance from the Earth, the less it __________

The force of attraction approaches zero at very large distances, but can never reach zero

weighs

Page 13: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.
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Question

You climb up a tree 4 m high and measure the force of gravity on your body.

You then climb up a tree 8 m high and measure the force of gravity on your body.

Do you weigh 4 times less (1/d2) when you’re up the 8 m tree?

Page 15: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

4.3 Weight and Weightlessness Weight has no

meaning without the concept of “support force”

When you take away the support force you are “weightless” or in “freefall”

Page 16: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Weight

You only weigh as much as the amount of support force you feel

Page 17: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Weightlessness

Page 18: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Artificial Gravity

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J0bnL3HyfUo

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4.4 Universal Gravitation

Why are the planets round?

mass contained in the planet exerts gravity on other mass within the planet

a sphere is the best way to distribute gravity equally

[draw on board]

Page 20: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Planetary Perturbations

Planets influence other planet’s orbits

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-zJACUydNL8

Page 21: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

F = G mass1 x mass2

(distance)2

J. Locke 1632 - 1704

Page 22: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Worksheet

page 28

Page 23: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

4.5 Projectile Motion

Gravity causes the path of projectiles thrown horizontally to curve

To analyze properly, look at horizontal and vertical components of motion separately

Page 24: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

The horizontal component

Object moves at constant velocity, no acceleration, due to its own inertia

if we ignore air resistance

dhorizontal = velocity x time

Page 25: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

The vertical component

acceleration due to gravity

dvertical = ½ g t2

Page 26: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Combined

Page 27: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Projectiles Launched Horizontally The curved path is

called a parabola Follows parabolic

motion Object will hit the

ground at the same time an object dropped straight down will hit

Page 28: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Projectiles Launched at an Angle Up

Still follows parabolic motion

Object will hit the ground after object dropped straight down

Page 29: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Projectiles Launched at an Angle Down

Still follows parabolic motion

Object will hit the ground ______

the same object dropped straight down?

Page 30: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Worksheet

page 29, 30

Page 31: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

dideal - dparabola = ½ g t2 = 5 t2

Page 32: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Launching Projectiles What trends do you notice? What’s the ideal launch angle?

Page 33: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

What other effects?

air resistance (lower angle = less air resistance)

Spin for golf balls (lower angle = less spin)

Page 34: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.
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Time of Flight

deceleration of g = acceleration of g

time up = time down

Page 36: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Worksheet

pages 31, 32

Page 37: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

4.6 Satellites The earth is not flat If an object is projected fast enough, it can

“fall” all the way around the earth satellites 18,000 mph for a baseball

Page 38: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

The Moon

a projectile that circles the Earth definitely influenced by Earth’s gravity, as

are other satellites Has enough velocity not to fall into the

Earth (or it would’ve done so long ago)

Page 39: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

4.7 Circular Orbits

A satellite in orbit always moves in a direction perpendicular to the force of gravity acting on it

A very special form of free fall (no support force) The higher the orbit, the less the speed, the

longer the path, and the longer the period (time it takes to make one orbit)

8 km/s ensures a perfect circular orbit

Page 40: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

above atmosphere

Page 41: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

4.8 Elliptical Orbits

If a projectile exceeds 8 km/s orbit will be an ellipse speed is not constant around the ellipse faster nearer massive object highest P.E. farthest from massive object

Page 42: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.
Page 43: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.
Page 44: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

PE = mgh

KE = ½ mv2

Page 45: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

W =F x d

Page 46: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Worksheets

pages 33-35

Page 47: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

4.9 Escape Velocity

Fire an object vertically What normally happens?

Page 48: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Escape Speed

The “initial burst” speed required to escape orbit

11.2 km/s for Earth (~25,000 mph) Leaves Earth, traveling slower and slower From any planet (or body):

v = (2 G M / d)1/2

Page 49: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Escape Speeds

Sun 333,000 Earth 620 km/s

Jupiter318 Earth 60.2 km/s

Earth 1 Earth 11.2 km/s

Mars 0.11 Earth 5.0 km/s

Moon 0.0123 Earth 2.4 km/s

Page 50: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Escape Speed

Only pertains to the initial thrust needed

Rockets could burn out if initially 11.2 km/s

You can actually escape at any speed if you’re willing to take enough time to do it

Page 51: PHS 116 Chapter 4 – Gravity, Projectiles, Satellites.

Chapter 4 Homework

Exercises: 1, 2, 5, 6, 9, 12, 13, 20, 22, 27, 30, 32, 36, 37, 40, 49

Problems: 1, 2, 3, 8