VU3Motion2009
... The force labelled FTR is the force the tyre exerts on the road. This force is directed in the opposite direction to the acceleration and thus cannot be the force producing that acceleration. The force labelled FRT is the Newton 3 reaction force arising from the action of FTR. It is this force (dire ...
... The force labelled FTR is the force the tyre exerts on the road. This force is directed in the opposite direction to the acceleration and thus cannot be the force producing that acceleration. The force labelled FRT is the Newton 3 reaction force arising from the action of FTR. It is this force (dire ...
Document
... Where did the roller coaster car get its kinetic energy? The work done by the electric motor was saved or stored by raising the cars to the top of the hill. The cars were said to have potential energy. In the roller coaster example, potential energy is stored in the cars as a result of their height; ...
... Where did the roller coaster car get its kinetic energy? The work done by the electric motor was saved or stored by raising the cars to the top of the hill. The cars were said to have potential energy. In the roller coaster example, potential energy is stored in the cars as a result of their height; ...
Chapter 4 2D Kinematics
... The bus suddenly slows down. Do you lurch forward or backward? And why? How about when the bus suddenly speed up from rest? STOP ...
... The bus suddenly slows down. Do you lurch forward or backward? And why? How about when the bus suddenly speed up from rest? STOP ...
Thinking about what you observed
... the floor acting back up against the legs of a chair to keep the chair from falling through the floor. Newtons third law leads to another interesting property: momentum. The momentum of an object is its mass multiplied by its velocity. Momentum is changed by force. Force causes acceleration which ch ...
... the floor acting back up against the legs of a chair to keep the chair from falling through the floor. Newtons third law leads to another interesting property: momentum. The momentum of an object is its mass multiplied by its velocity. Momentum is changed by force. Force causes acceleration which ch ...
(e) None of the above
... As a skier jumps off the end of the slope, the earth is spinning below her at about 1000 miles/hour. Why doesn't the jumper land in the next county? (a) the jumper aims herself in order to cancel the effect of the earth's rotation (b) since the earth pulls down on the jumper, the jumper pulls back e ...
... As a skier jumps off the end of the slope, the earth is spinning below her at about 1000 miles/hour. Why doesn't the jumper land in the next county? (a) the jumper aims herself in order to cancel the effect of the earth's rotation (b) since the earth pulls down on the jumper, the jumper pulls back e ...
Name Section Date
... just described—work and energy. In this unit, you will begin the process of understanding scientific definitions of work and energy. You will start by considering both intuitive and mathematical definitions of the work done on objects by forces. You will also learn how to calculate the work in the n ...
... just described—work and energy. In this unit, you will begin the process of understanding scientific definitions of work and energy. You will start by considering both intuitive and mathematical definitions of the work done on objects by forces. You will also learn how to calculate the work in the n ...
Section 1 What Is Matter?
... But you are made up of more matter than a peanut is, so you have greater mass. The mass of an object does not change when the object’s location changes. The mass of an object changes only when the amount of matter that makes up the object changes. The Difference Between Mass and Weight The terms mas ...
... But you are made up of more matter than a peanut is, so you have greater mass. The mass of an object does not change when the object’s location changes. The mass of an object changes only when the amount of matter that makes up the object changes. The Difference Between Mass and Weight The terms mas ...
Fluid Dynamics: The Navier-Stokes Equations
... together the concepts of force, momentum, velocity, and energy to describe the behaviour of macroscopic objects [1]. Though it was developed nearly 400 years ago, many of the basic tenets of classical mechanics hold for common situations (excluding microscopic particle dynamics, high-velocity motion ...
... together the concepts of force, momentum, velocity, and energy to describe the behaviour of macroscopic objects [1]. Though it was developed nearly 400 years ago, many of the basic tenets of classical mechanics hold for common situations (excluding microscopic particle dynamics, high-velocity motion ...