Wednesday, Mar. 10, 2004
... Applied forces: Forces that are external to the system. These forces can take away or add energy to the system. So the mechanical energy of the system is no longer conserved. If you were to carry around a ball, the force you apply to the ball is external to the system of ball and the Earth. Therefor ...
... Applied forces: Forces that are external to the system. These forces can take away or add energy to the system. So the mechanical energy of the system is no longer conserved. If you were to carry around a ball, the force you apply to the ball is external to the system of ball and the Earth. Therefor ...
Forces & Newton`s Laws
... Hot gases are pushed out from the bottom of the rocket as the rocket is thrust upward. The force of the gases pushing against the surface of the earth is equal and opposite to the force with which the rocket moves upward ...
... Hot gases are pushed out from the bottom of the rocket as the rocket is thrust upward. The force of the gases pushing against the surface of the earth is equal and opposite to the force with which the rocket moves upward ...
Problems will have partial credit. Show all work.. Style, neatness
... 3. All except one of the following require the application of a net force. Which one is the exception? a) to change an object from a state of rest to a state of motion. b) to maintain an object in motion at a constant velocity. c) to change an object's speed without changing its direction of motion. ...
... 3. All except one of the following require the application of a net force. Which one is the exception? a) to change an object from a state of rest to a state of motion. b) to maintain an object in motion at a constant velocity. c) to change an object's speed without changing its direction of motion. ...
PowerPoint 演示文稿
... R=0.01m. The hoop rotates at a constant rate of =4.0rev/s about a vertical diameter. a) Find the angle at which the bead is in vertical equilibrium. b) Is it possible for the bead to “ride” at the same elevation as the center of the loop? c) What will happen if the hoop rotates at 1.00rev/s =4.0 ...
... R=0.01m. The hoop rotates at a constant rate of =4.0rev/s about a vertical diameter. a) Find the angle at which the bead is in vertical equilibrium. b) Is it possible for the bead to “ride” at the same elevation as the center of the loop? c) What will happen if the hoop rotates at 1.00rev/s =4.0 ...
Ch_3 Presentation
... materials as they move past each other. Friction is created from the irregularities and differences in materials. Even very smooth surfaces have some microscopic ridges/grooves. These, clash with the opposite surface, and produce opposing forces. ...
... materials as they move past each other. Friction is created from the irregularities and differences in materials. Even very smooth surfaces have some microscopic ridges/grooves. These, clash with the opposite surface, and produce opposing forces. ...
Biomechanics – the study of cause and effect - NCEA
... If the path of two points on a body follow straight parallel lines, the motion is linear. If the path is curved, the motion is curvilinear. ...
... If the path of two points on a body follow straight parallel lines, the motion is linear. If the path is curved, the motion is curvilinear. ...
PowerPoint
... • Figure out all forces and their points of application • Sum all forces and divide by mass to find COM’s linear acceleration • For each force, compute perp-dot-product from COM to point of force application and add value into total torque of COM • Divide total torque by the MOI at the COM to find a ...
... • Figure out all forces and their points of application • Sum all forces and divide by mass to find COM’s linear acceleration • For each force, compute perp-dot-product from COM to point of force application and add value into total torque of COM • Divide total torque by the MOI at the COM to find a ...
Ideal Mechanical Advantage
... 1. Bud, a very large man of mass 130 kg, is pulling on the rope attached to the crate with a force of 450 N. He pulls at an angle of 38 as shown. There is a frictional force of 125 N. a) If the crate moves a distance of 55 cm, how much work does Bud do on the crate? b) If the crate has a mass of 6 ...
... 1. Bud, a very large man of mass 130 kg, is pulling on the rope attached to the crate with a force of 450 N. He pulls at an angle of 38 as shown. There is a frictional force of 125 N. a) If the crate moves a distance of 55 cm, how much work does Bud do on the crate? b) If the crate has a mass of 6 ...
friction newton`s third law
... are always in the opposite direction. We learnt earlier that the area under a force displacement graph represents the amount of work done. The same holds true for a force – extension graph (which is basically the same). Work done in compressing the spring = Ep ...
... are always in the opposite direction. We learnt earlier that the area under a force displacement graph represents the amount of work done. The same holds true for a force – extension graph (which is basically the same). Work done in compressing the spring = Ep ...