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Chapter 10 Forces

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Chapter 10 Forces. Force and Net Force. Force is a push or a pull on an object. Net force is the total force on an object. Unbalanced Force Balanced Force. The balanced forces are the forces in equal and opposite directions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 10 Forces

Chapter 10 Forces

Page 2: Chapter 10 Forces

Force and Net Force•Force is a push or

a pull on an object.•Net force is the total force on an object.

Page 3: Chapter 10 Forces

Unbalanced ForceBalanced Force

• Unbalanced Force can cause an object to move, stop moving, or change direction.

• The balanced forces are the forces in equal and opposite directions.

• The balanced forces are the forces in equal and opposite directions.

Page 4: Chapter 10 Forces
Page 5: Chapter 10 Forces

Forces change motion.

Page 6: Chapter 10 Forces

• HMM…. Can you see the unbalanced force here?

• HMM…. Can you see the unbalanced force here?

Page 7: Chapter 10 Forces

Page 8: Chapter 10 Forces

Inertia –An object at rest will stay at rest unless acted upon by an outside force.

–Inertia is every objects resistance to change its motion.

Newton’s First LawNewton’s First Law

Greater mass

means

Greater inertia

Greater mass

means

Greater inertia

Page 9: Chapter 10 Forces
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•Take out a piece of paper

and label it “Inertia Mini

Lab”

•Take out a piece of paper

and label it “Inertia Mini

Lab”

Page 14: Chapter 10 Forces

Newton’s Second Law

• The acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the net force acting on the object and inversely proportional to the object’s mass.

Page 15: Chapter 10 Forces

Force=mass x accelerationForce=mass x accelerationF=m x aF=m x a

• Or

• a = Force/ mass

• a = F/m

• Or

• a = Force/ mass

• a = F/m

Page 16: Chapter 10 Forces

Equation for Newton

•Newton=m x a.•Newton=m x a.

It’s the same as the force equation!

It’s the same as the force equation!

Page 17: Chapter 10 Forces

Force and mass determine

acceleration.

Page 18: Chapter 10 Forces

Luke! Use the mass times

the acceleration!

Luke! Use the mass times

the acceleration!

Page 19: Chapter 10 Forces

Sometimes we might calculate mass using Force and

Acceleration

• Mass=Force/Acceleration

• m=F/a

Page 20: Chapter 10 Forces

How much Force was required to make a 2000kg car accelerate at

5m/s/s?

1 2 3

33% 33%33%

1. 400N

2. 0.001N

3. 10,000N

•Force=Mass x acceleration•F=ma•F=2000kg x 5m/s/s•a= 10,000N or kgxm/s/s

Page 21: Chapter 10 Forces

If you drop a 15kg bowling ball with a Force of 147N, what is it’s

acceleration?

•Acceleration=Force/Mass•a=F/m•a=147kgxm/s/s÷15kg•a= 9.8m/s/s

1 2 3

33% 33%33%

1. 9.8m/s/s

2. 0.1m/s/s

3. 2,205m/s/s

• 0• 0

• 30

• 30

Page 22: Chapter 10 Forces

A person throws a baseball at an acceleration of 25m/s/s with

12.5N of Force. What’s the Mass of the ball?

1 2 3

33% 33%33%

1. 312kg

2. .5kg

3. 2kg

•Mass=Force/Acceleration•m=F/a•a=12.5kgxm/s/s÷25m/s/s•a= .5kg

Page 23: Chapter 10 Forces
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4 Types of Friction• The 4 types of friction are: 1. Sliding friction (strongest)2. Rolling friction 3. Fluid friction (weakest).4. Static friction

Page 25: Chapter 10 Forces

• What type of friction?

Page 26: Chapter 10 Forces

•What type of

friction?

•What type of

friction?

Page 27: Chapter 10 Forces

•What type of friction?

•What type of friction?

Page 28: Chapter 10 Forces

What type of friction?What type of friction?

Page 29: Chapter 10 Forces

2 Factors of Friction

•1-Type of surface. •2-How hard the two surfaces push together.

Page 30: Chapter 10 Forces

Which type of hockey has more friction?

Which type of hockey has more friction?

Page 31: Chapter 10 Forces
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Air Resistance and Weight

•Air resistance is a type of fluid friction on falling objects. Weight is the force of gravity on an object at the surface of the Earth.

Page 33: Chapter 10 Forces
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Law of Universal Gravitation

• Gravity acts between all objects in the universe.

Page 35: Chapter 10 Forces

Gravity Between Objects• The force of gravity between objects

increases with greater mass and decreases with greater distance.

Page 36: Chapter 10 Forces
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Page 38: Chapter 10 Forces

•Gravity is the force that pulls objects toward the Earth- acceleration due to gravity is 9.8m/s/s.

Page 39: Chapter 10 Forces
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Newton’s Third law• If an object exerts a force

on another object, the second object, exerts an equal force in the opposite direction.

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Momentum• The momentum of an object is the

product of its mass and velocity.• In other words:

Momentum = mass x velocityMomentum = mass x velocity

• Kg x m/s• Kg x m/s

Page 46: Chapter 10 Forces

COLLISIONS

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Law of Conservation of Momentum

• The total momentum of the objects that interact does not change.

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