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Motion Definition Event that involves a change in the position or location of something. Motion is Relative • Relative – it is described compared to a REFERENCE POINT Types of Motion • Uniform motion - constant speed in a straight line • Accelerated motion – motion that is changing in speed or direction • Circular motion - speed is constant but the direction of motion is changing continuously Scalar Quantities • Show magnitude [amount] only – Speed, time, temperature Vector Quantities • Show magnitude and direction – Velocity, acceleration, force • May be graphically represented – Arrows Speed Average Speed • Comparison of time and distance – A scalar quantity [magnitude only] – Distance traveled per unit time •S=d/t •T=d/s •D=sxt Speed Instantaneous Speed • Speed at any instant Speed Constant Speed • Speed that does not change – Instantaneous speed that does not change Velocity • Speed AND direction – A vector quantity [magnitude & direction] Acceleration • A change in velocity – Speeding up • Positive acceleration – Slowing down • Negative acceleration • Deceleration – Changing direction Forces • Pushes or pulls • May cause acceleration [changes in motion] • May also cause changes in shape Balanced Forces • All forces acting on an object are equal • There is no motion Unbalanced Forces • All forces acting on an object are not equal • One or more force is stronger than others • Motion occurs Net Force • The sum of all forces acting on an object – A net force of 0 • No motion – A net force of more than 0 • Motion occurs Resultant • Another term for net force Friction • Force that slows down motion – Air resistance creates friction in most situations Gravity • Force that attracts all objects toward each other • More mass = more gravity • Acceleration because of gravity is 9.8 m/s/s • All objects accelerate at the same rate Newton's Laws • Describe motion and changes in motion First Law of Motion • Law of inertia – Objects at rest [not moving] will not begin to move until a force acts on them – Objects in motion will not stop moving until a force acts on them – Objects with more mass have more inertia • Bigger objects are harder to start and stop Second Law of Motion • Law of acceleration – A force is needed to change motion – Objects accelerate in the direction of the force – The more force applied, then more acceleration – The more mass an object has, the more force is needed to accelerate the object Third Law of Motion • Law of action-reaction – Forces occur in pairs – The forces are equal and opposite – One force is an action force – The other force is a reaction force – The forces act on different objects