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Chapter 4 Applying Force
Chapter 4 Applying Force

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13. Hookes Law and SHM

... However there are many instances when a moving object is subject to a changing force – can we still calculate future position and velocity? Well, we can if we can quantify the force, i.e. if we know how the force is changing. One example of an object experiencing a changing force is a stretched spri ...
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... Inertia = tendency of an object to resist changes in its velocity. Since F = ma ...
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... b. If an object is moving to the right and slowing down, then the net force on the object is directed towards the left. c. Accelerating objects are either slowing down or speeding up. d. The acceleration of an object is directly dependent upon its mass and inversely dependent upon its net force. e. ...
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... Objects that do not have their mass concentrated at a point also oscillate due to gravitational torques. ...
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Lesson 13 Moments – Turning forces

... Note; For a ball bouncing off a wall, don’t forget the initial and final velocity are in different directions, so you will have to make one of them negative. In this case mv – mu = 5m - -3m = 8m ...
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... During the time the two objects are in contact, they are usually both changing their velocity (one speeds up while the other slows down). Impulse (FDt) is defined as being the product of the average force (F) on an object times the time interval (Dt) over which the force acts (the time that the two ...
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AP Physics 1 * Unit 2

... 4.A.1.1: I can use representations of the center of mass of an isolated two-object system to analyze the motion of the system qualitatively and semi-quantitatively. [SP 1.2, 1.4, 2.3, 6.4] 4.A.2.1: I can make predictions about the motion of a system based on the fact that acceleration is equal to th ...
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Coriolis force

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