Download Contact forces

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

Newton's theorem of revolving orbits wikipedia , lookup

Fictitious force wikipedia , lookup

Friction wikipedia , lookup

Frictional contact mechanics wikipedia , lookup

Hunting oscillation wikipedia , lookup

Drag (physics) wikipedia , lookup

Nuclear force wikipedia , lookup

Centrifugal force wikipedia , lookup

Fundamental interaction wikipedia , lookup

Centripetal force wikipedia , lookup

Classical central-force problem wikipedia , lookup

Gravity wikipedia , lookup

Force wikipedia , lookup

Buoyancy wikipedia , lookup

Newton's laws of motion wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Forces are usually divided into two types.
1. Contact forces occur because of physical contact between
objects.
Examples: pushing open a door
pulling on a rope
2. Field forces – Act at a distance through space. The
presence of an object effects the space around it, creating a
region of space around the object called a field.
Example: gravitational field
magnetic field around a magnet
CONTACT FORCES
Normal force 𝐅𝐧
 Force that prevents an object from falling through
the surface of another body
 Always acts perpendicular to the surface
 Always equals the forces applied to the surface
(or surface will break!)
Fn
mg
Called the ‘normal’ force
because it is always
normal (perpendicular) to
the surface.
CONTACT FORCES
Normal force 𝐅𝐧
 Force that prevents an object from falling through
the surface of another body
 Always acts perpendicular to the surface
 Always equals the forces applied to the surface
(or surface will break!)
Fn
Fn
Ffr
Fn
F
mg
mg
CONTACT FORCES
Friction force Ffr
 Friction is a force that is created whenever two surfaces move
or try to move across each other.
 Friction always opposes the motion or attempted motion of
one surface across another surface.
 Friction is dependent on the texture/roughness of both
surfaces.
 Friction is also dependent on the force which presses the
surfaces together.
motion
friction
CONTACT FORCES
Air resistance / Drag
 When an object moves through air or any other fluid, the fluid
exerts a friction-like force on the moving object. The force is
called drag.
 Drag depends upon the speed of the object, becoming larger
as the speed increases. (UNLIKE FRICTION!)
 Drag also depends upon the size and the shape of the object
and the density and kind of fluid. (UNLIKE FRICTION!)
B/c drag increases with speed,
object moving through the air reach
a terminal velocity – a maximum
speed at which Fg = Fdrag so there is
no more acceleration.
CONTACT FORCES
Air resistance / Drag
 When an object moves through air or any other fluid, the fluid
exerts a frictionlike force on the moving object. The force is
called drag.
 Drag depends upon the speed of the object, becoming larger
as the speed increases. (UNLIKE FRICTION!)
 Drag also depends upon the size and the shape of the object
and the density and kind of fluid. (UNLIKE FRICTION!)
Without drag, raindrops would fall
340 m/h.
With drag, they only fall 17 m/h.
CONTACT FORCES
Tension
 the force that the end of the rope exerts on whatever is
attached to it.
 Direction of the force is along the rope.
T2
T1
physics
T2
What is the
relative force
along the two
yellow arrows?
Why?
CONTACT FORCES
Spring Force
 Force due to the elasticity of a material
 Depends on the elasticity of the spring
 Direction is opposite displacement
CONTACT FORCES: THINK PAIR SHARE
Type of Force
Normal
Friction
Drag
Tension
Spring
Direction
CONTACT FORCES: THINK PAIR SHARE
Type of Force
Direction
Normal
Perpendicular to surface, opposite applied / gravitational forces
Friction
Opposite motion
Drag
Opposite motion
Tension
Along the rope & opposite motion
Spring
Opposite displacement
FIELD FORCES
Field Forces
Relative
Strength
Action Distance
Gravitational Force
attraction between objects due
to their masses
10-45
Infinite – but decreases with
square of distance
Electromagnetic Force
between charges
10-2
Infinite – but decreases with
square of distance
Strong Nuclear Force
keeps nucleus together
1
Very short!
Weak Nuclear Force
arise in certain radioactive
processes
10-8
Very very short!
FIELD FORCES
Field Forces
Relative
Strength
Action Distance
Gravitational Force
attraction between objects due
to their masses
10-45
Infinite – but decreases with
square of distance
Electromagnetic Force
between charges
10-2
Infinite – but decreases with
square of distance
Strong Nuclear Force
keeps nucleus together
1
Very short!
Weak Nuclear Force
arise in certain radioactive
processes
10-8
Very very short!
At the atomic level – all contact forces are result of repulsive
electromagnetic forces – the repulsion of atoms’ electric fields
HOW TO SOLVE FORCE PROBLEMS
1.
2.
3.
Draw a free body diagram – label all the forces acting
on one object.
Add up the forces
Apply Newton’s second law: F = ma.
3. Identify forces that act on the system
How to draw a force diagram
Label them on diagram
1. Choose
NONE body to be isolated
decision: cart
dog or the cart? F
dog
Make a simple sketch of the system – point system
F2.
fr
Fnet
mg
4. Find out the net force by
adding the force vectors
5. Apply Newton’s second law
Fnet = ma