Download Section 2 Powerpoint

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Kinematics wikipedia , lookup

Brownian motion wikipedia , lookup

Jerk (physics) wikipedia , lookup

Vibration wikipedia , lookup

Hunting oscillation wikipedia , lookup

Fictitious force wikipedia , lookup

N-body problem wikipedia , lookup

Relativistic mechanics wikipedia , lookup

Center of mass wikipedia , lookup

Classical mechanics wikipedia , lookup

Buoyancy wikipedia , lookup

Centrifugal force wikipedia , lookup

Rigid body dynamics wikipedia , lookup

Work (physics) wikipedia , lookup

Force wikipedia , lookup

Weight wikipedia , lookup

Modified Newtonian dynamics wikipedia , lookup

Newton's theorem of revolving orbits wikipedia , lookup

Classical central-force problem wikipedia , lookup

Centripetal force wikipedia , lookup

Equations of motion wikipedia , lookup

Seismometer wikipedia , lookup

Inertia wikipedia , lookup

Newton's laws of motion wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Section 2
Newton’s First and Second
Laws of Motion
Key Concepts
• How does Newton’s first law relate change
in motion to a zero net force?
• How does Newton’s second law relate
force, mass, and acceleration?
• How are weight and mass related?
Aristotle, Galileo, and Newton
• Aristotle incorrectly proposed that force is
required to keep an object moving at
constant speed.
• Galileo concluded that moving objects not
subjected to friction or any other force
would continue to move indefinitely.
Galileo’s work
helped correct
misconceptions
about force and
motion that had
been widely held
since Aristotle’s
time.
Isaac Newton
• 1665
• Trinity College in Cambridge, England
• He published a book entitled Principia.
Isaac Newton
published his work on
force
and motion in the book
entitled Principia.
Newton’s First Law of Motion
• According to Newton’s first law of motion,
the state of motion of an object does not
change as long as the net force acting on the
object is zero.
• Unless an unbalanced force acts, an object at
rest remains at rest, and an object in motion
remains in motion with the same speed and
direction.
• Newton’s first law of motion is sometimes called
the law of inertia.
• Inertia is the tendency of an object to resist a
change in its motion.
Newton’s First Law of Motion
• an object at rest tends to remain at rest,
and an object in motion tends to remain in
motion with the same direction and speed.
This crash sequence illustrates
inertia—the tendency
of an object in motion to remain
in motion.
At impact, the air bag deploys. Note that
the test dummy continues its forward
motion as the collision begins to slow
the car.
WHY?
Newton’s Second Law of Motion
• How do unbalanced forces affect the motion of
an object?
• An unbalanced force causes an object’s velocity
to change (accelerate).
• The acceleration is directly proportional to the
force acting on it.
• Newton also learned that the acceleration of an
object depends upon its mass
• Mass is a measure of the inertia of an object
and depends on the amount of matter the object
contains.
Newton’s Second Law of Motion
• According to Newton’s second law of
motion, the acceleration of an object is
equal to the force acting on it divided
by the object’s mass.
Formula:
Acceleration = Force
Mass
or
f
a=
m
• A boy pushes forward a cart of groceries
with a total mass of 40.0 kg. What is the
acceleration of the cart if the net force on
the cart is 60.0 N?
• What is the upward acceleration of a
helicopter with a mass of 5000 kg if a force
of 10,000 N acts on it in an upward
direction?
• An automobile with a mass of 1200 kg
accelerates at a rate of 3.0 m/s2 in the
forward direction. What is the net force
acting on the automobile? (Hint: Solve
Newton’s Second Law formula for force.)
• A 25-N force accelerates a boy in a
wheelchair at 0.5 m/s2 What is the mass of
the boy and the wheelchair? (Hint: Solve
Newton’s second law formula for mass.)
Weight and Mass
• Weight is the force of gravity acting on an
object.
• Formula:
• Weight = Mass x Acceleration due to gravity
or
W = mg
Weight and Mass
• Mass is a measure of the inertia of an
object; weight is a measure of the force
of gravity acting on an object.
Astronaut on Earth
Mass = 88.0 kg; Weight = 863 N
Astronaut on Moon
Mass = 88.0 kg; Weight = 141 N
Reviewing Concepts
• 1. State Newton’s first law of motion in
your own words.
• 2. What equation states Newton’s second
law of motion?
• 3. How is mass different from weight?