Slide 1
... Conservation of Momentum A 15-kg medicine ball is thrown at a velocity of 5.0 m/s to a 60-kg person who is at rest on ice. The person catches the ball and subsequently slides with the ball across the ice. Determine the velocity of the person and the ball after the collision. ...
... Conservation of Momentum A 15-kg medicine ball is thrown at a velocity of 5.0 m/s to a 60-kg person who is at rest on ice. The person catches the ball and subsequently slides with the ball across the ice. Determine the velocity of the person and the ball after the collision. ...
PH212Chapter11_15
... Rotating about a Fixed Axis • Angular momentum as analogue of linear momentum (What could we conclude?) • Scalar expressions for angular momentum, the relation of torque and angular momentum, and conservation of angular momentum ...
... Rotating about a Fixed Axis • Angular momentum as analogue of linear momentum (What could we conclude?) • Scalar expressions for angular momentum, the relation of torque and angular momentum, and conservation of angular momentum ...
Supplimentary Notes IV Rotational Dynamics So far we have only
... from the axis. Consider a simple rigid object consisting of two masses connected by a massless rod on the earth. Suppose we consider balancing the object about a point on the massless rod. Let the object to the right have a mass m1 and be at a distance x1 from the axis, and let the object to the lef ...
... from the axis. Consider a simple rigid object consisting of two masses connected by a massless rod on the earth. Suppose we consider balancing the object about a point on the massless rod. Let the object to the right have a mass m1 and be at a distance x1 from the axis, and let the object to the lef ...
3 Types of Chemical Reactions
... brakes at the same time. Which vehicle will stop first? You most likely know that it will be the car. But why? The answer is momentum. The momentum of an object depends on the object’s mass and velocity. Momentum is the product of the mass and velocity of an object. In the figure below, a car and a ...
... brakes at the same time. Which vehicle will stop first? You most likely know that it will be the car. But why? The answer is momentum. The momentum of an object depends on the object’s mass and velocity. Momentum is the product of the mass and velocity of an object. In the figure below, a car and a ...
Net force
... brick off the ground B. drag the brick by a string attached to a spring scale so that it gradually speeds up C. drag the brick by a string attached to a spring scale along the surface of a table at a constant speed and read the force D. hang the brick from a string attached to a spring scale and rea ...
... brick off the ground B. drag the brick by a string attached to a spring scale so that it gradually speeds up C. drag the brick by a string attached to a spring scale along the surface of a table at a constant speed and read the force D. hang the brick from a string attached to a spring scale and rea ...
Work done (J) - MrSimonPorter
... Ft = mv – mu The quantity Ft is called the impulse, and of course mv – mu is the change in ...
... Ft = mv – mu The quantity Ft is called the impulse, and of course mv – mu is the change in ...
Slides - PDF - University of Toronto Physics
... • Justin is doing a bench press, and he slowly lowers the bar down a distance of 0.30 m while pushing upwards on the bar with a force of 200 N. He then pushes it up slowly the same distance of 0.30 m back to its starting position, also pushing upwards on the bar with a force of 200 N. • During the c ...
... • Justin is doing a bench press, and he slowly lowers the bar down a distance of 0.30 m while pushing upwards on the bar with a force of 200 N. He then pushes it up slowly the same distance of 0.30 m back to its starting position, also pushing upwards on the bar with a force of 200 N. • During the c ...
Slides - Powerpoint - University of Toronto Physics
... – reducing the speed of an object or bringing it to a halt Example: Applying the brakes to slow a moving car, work is done on it (the friction force supplied by the brakes ...
... – reducing the speed of an object or bringing it to a halt Example: Applying the brakes to slow a moving car, work is done on it (the friction force supplied by the brakes ...
Sections 13.1-13.4 - University of Mary Hardin–Baylor
... kilograms (kg), and weight is calculated from W = mg. If the gravitational acceleration (g) is specified in units of m/s2, then the weight is expressed in newtons (N). On the earth’s surface, g can be taken as g = 9.81 m/s2. W (N) = m (kg) g (m/s2) => N = kg·m/s2 FPS System: In the FPS system of uni ...
... kilograms (kg), and weight is calculated from W = mg. If the gravitational acceleration (g) is specified in units of m/s2, then the weight is expressed in newtons (N). On the earth’s surface, g can be taken as g = 9.81 m/s2. W (N) = m (kg) g (m/s2) => N = kg·m/s2 FPS System: In the FPS system of uni ...
Newton’s Laws of Motion - Wayne State University
... • A reference frame can be considered inertial if a body subject to no external force, moves in a straight line with constant velocity in that frame. • If Newton’s laws are valid in a given reference frame, then they are also valid in any reference in uniform motion relative to that first frame. • A ...
... • A reference frame can be considered inertial if a body subject to no external force, moves in a straight line with constant velocity in that frame. • If Newton’s laws are valid in a given reference frame, then they are also valid in any reference in uniform motion relative to that first frame. • A ...
Chapter 2
... – The Moon’s motion could be explained by the existence of a force (to deviate the Moon from a straight inertial trajectory) and that such a force decreased with distance – Orbital motion could be understood as a projectile moving “parallel” to the Earth’s surface at such a speed that its gravitatio ...
... – The Moon’s motion could be explained by the existence of a force (to deviate the Moon from a straight inertial trajectory) and that such a force decreased with distance – Orbital motion could be understood as a projectile moving “parallel” to the Earth’s surface at such a speed that its gravitatio ...