forces & motion
DESCRIPTION
Forces & Motion. Chapter 12. TUG-O-WAR TIME!!!. What is a force. A push or pull that acts on an object Forces can cause a resting object to move, or it can accelerate a moving object by changing the object’s speed or direction. Measuring Force. Spring Scales - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Forces & MotionChapter 12
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TUG-O-WAR TIME!!!
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What is a force A push or pull that acts on an object
Forces can cause a resting object to move, or it can accelerate a moving object by changing the object’s speed or direction
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Measuring Force Spring Scales
The stretch of a spring scale depends on the weight (type of force) acting on it
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Units of Force Measured in newtons (N)
1 N = the force that causes a 1 kilogram mass to accelerate at a rate of 1 meter per second squared 1 N = 1 kg•m/s2
This unit is named after Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727) Scientist who explained how force, mass and
acceleration are related
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Force Diagrams Use arrows to represent the direction
and strength of a force (like a vector!)
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Spring Scale ActivityChoose five objects on your table. Attach a string to your objects if necessary. Use the spring scale to determine the weight (in newtons) of your objects. Draw a force arrow for each object that is to scale relative to each other force arrow.
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Combining Forces Back to tug-o-war…
You can combine force arrows to show the result of how forces combine
Forces in the same direction add together
Forces in the opposite direction subtract from one another
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Net Force The overall force acting on an object
after all the forces are combined
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Balanced Forces Sometimes the net force acting on an
object is zero.
Balanced Forces Forces that combine to produce a net
force of zero Results in NO CHANGE in an object’s
motion
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Common Example Two people locked in an arm wrestling
match
Tug-o-War match with two evenly matched teams!
Two football players pushing against one another at the line of scrimmage
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Unbalanced Forces Results when the net force acting on an
object is NOT equal to zero
When an unbalanced force acts on an object, the object accelerates
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Combining Forces
= Adding Forces
= 0 Equal and opposite forces
=Subtracting Forces
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Friction A force that opposes motion of objects that
touch as they move past each other.
Acts at the surface where objects are in contact (includes all solids, liquids, and gases)
Friction is important! Without friction every surface would be impossibly
slippery Food would slide right off your fork Walking would be impossible Cars would slide around with their wheels spinning
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Four main types of friction1. Static Friction
2. Sliding Friction
3. Rolling Friction
4. Fluid Friction
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Static Friction The friction force that acts on objects
that are not moving
Always acts in a direction opposite to that of the applied force
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Sliding Friction A force that opposes the direction of
motion of an object as it slides over a surface
LESS than static friction This means that once an object is moving,
less force is needed to keep the object moving than to start it moving
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Rolling Friction The friction force that acts on rolling objects
When a round object rolls across a flat floor, both the object and the floor are bent slightly out of shape at the point of contact
100 – 1000 times less than static or sliding friction This is why movers use wheeled dollies to
move heavy objects!
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Fluid Friction Liquids and mixtures of air are known as fluids
Fluid friction results when fluids (like liquids and air) oppose motion of an object Example, when you stir cake batter you can feel
fluid friction
Fluid friction increases as the speed of the object moving through the object increases
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Air Resistance Fluid friction acting on an object moving
through the air
At higher speeds air resistance is a significant force
For example, swimmers, cyclists and even runners wear slick racing suits to reduce air resistance
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Wing Suits...(Start @ 1:00 min
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Types of Friction Foldable Activity!
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Gravity A force that acts between any two
masses
An attractive force (it pulls objects together)
Unlike friction, gravity can act over large distances (think skydiving!)
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Gravity (continued) Earth’s gravity acts downward toward
the center of the Earth
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Falling Objects Both gravity and air resistance affect
the motion of a falling object
Gravity causes objects to accelerate downward
Air resistance acts in the direction opposite to the motion, reducing acceleration
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Flying Squirrels… As objects fall they accelerate (gain speed)
As speed increases, air resistance increases
If an object falls long enough, the upward force of air resistance eventually will equal the downward force of gravity Forces are balanced, acceleration is zero and
the object continues falling at a constant velocity
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Terminal Velocity Constant velocity of a falling object
when the force of air resistance equals the force of gravity
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Projectile Motion The motion of a falling object (projectile)
after it is given an initial forward velocity
The only forces acting on a projectile are gravity and air resistance
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Projectile Motion (Continued) The combination of an initial forward
velocity and the downward vertical force of gravity causes the ball to follow a curved path
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12.2Newton’s First & Second Laws of Motion
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Newton’s First Law of Motion The state of motion of an object does not
change as long as the net force acting on the object is zero
An object at rest remains at rest
An object in motion remains in motion with the same speed and direction (i.e. no acceleration)
An unbalanced force must be acting on an object if the object is accelerating
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BrainstormWhat are some everyday events that give evidence of Newton’s first law?
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Inertia Newton’s first law
is called the “Law of Inertia”
Inertia is the tendency of an object to resist change in motion
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Beach Ball Activity
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Crash Test… Seatbelts... To wear or not to wear?
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Unbalanced Forces Unbalanced forces cause an object’s velocity to
change
If velocity is change, the object is accelerating (a change in speed or direction)
The acceleration of an object depends on both the force acting on it and the mass of the object
Mass A measure of the inertia of an object; depends on
the amount of matter an object contains
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2nd Law of Motion The acceleration of an object is equal to
the net force acting on it divided by the object’s mass
Acceleration = ForceMass
Fa = m
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Acceleration Always in the same direction as the net
force
REMEMBER N = 1kg•m/s2
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Math Practice (guided) An automobile with a mass of 1000
kilograms accelerates when the traffic light turns green. If the net force on the car is 4000 newtons, what is the car’s acceleration?
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More 2nd Law Examples#1A boy pushes forward a cart of groceries with a total mass of 40.0 kg. What is the acceleration of the cart if the net force on the cart is 60.0 N?
#2An automobile with a mass of 1200 kg accelerates at a rate of 3.0 m/s2 in the forward direction. What is the net force acting on the automobile?
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Weight vs. Mass Weight is the force of gravity acting on
an object
Weight = Mass x Acceleration due to gravity
Weight is a measure of the force of gravity acting on an object
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12.3Newton’s Third Law of Motion and Momentum
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Newton’s Third Law Whenever one object exerts a force on a
second object, the second object exerts an equal and opposite force on the first object
For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction Action and reaction forces are equal in
size and opposite in direction
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Action-Reaction Forces DO NOT CANCEL Action forces and reaction forces act on
different objects so they do not cancel each other out
Net force only equals zero if opposite forces are acting on the same object
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Example 1 A swimmer uses her
arms to push against the water (ACTION FORCE)
The swimmer is propelled forward because the water exerts a force on the swimmer (REACTION FORCE)
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Example 2 Hammer hitting a
nail into a piece of wood
Action Force?
Reaction Force?
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Example 3 Your bumper car
runs in to another bumper car
Action force?
Reaction force?
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Momentum The product of an object’s mass and its
velocity
An object has a large momentum if the product of its mass and velocity is very large
Momentum = Mass (kg) x Velocity (m/s)
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The momentum of an object at rest is zero because it has no velocity
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Which has more momentum? A 0.046 kilogram golf ball with a speed
of 60.0 meters per second
Or a 7.0 kilogram bowling ball with a speed of 6.0 meters per second?
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Conservation of Momentum What happens to momentum when
objects collide? It is conserved (or stays the same)
If no net force acts on a system then the total momentum of the system does not change
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The loss of momentum of one object equals the gain in momentum of another object
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12.4Universal Forces
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4 Universal Forces These four forces exist everywhere in
the universe Electromagnetic Forces Strong Nuclear Forces Weak Nuclear Forces Gravitational Forces
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Gravitational Force The weakest universal force
Definition An attractive force that acts between any
two masses
Newton’s law of universal gravitation states that every object in the universe attracts every other object
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Examples Your desk is exerting a gravitational force
on you and you are exerting a gravitational force on your desk.
The person next to you is exerting a gravitational force on you, and you are exerting a gravitational force on them
Believable?
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Here’s why you don’t feel it… It takes an enormous mass (like Earth’s)
to exert a large gravitational force
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The Earth & Moon Newton’s 1st law says that unless a force
acts on an object, the object will continue to move along a straight line path
Earth’s gravitational force on the moon keeps the moon in orbit around Earth
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Centripetal Force A center-directed force that continuously
changes the direction of an object to make it move in a circle
Gravity on Earth is a center-directed force, so object that are close enough to earth to be affected by gravity move in a circular path around Earth
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Satellites in Orbit Launched into orbit by a rocket or space
shuttle
Because they have an initial velocity (and because there is virtually no friction in space), satellites will move in a circular path around Earth at a constant speed
The centripetal force of gravity results in a circular path around Earth