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Newton’s Second Law, Speed, Acceleration and Energy Measuring Motion Measuring Distance  Meter – international (SI) base unit for measuring distance. 1 mm = 50 m Calculating Speed  Speed (S) = distance traveled (d) / the amount of time it took (t). S = d/t Units for speed  Units for speed are relative, and really any unit that makes sense for the scale being measured is fine. However, it will always be a distance unit / a time unit      Cars: m/h (or mph), km/h (or kph) Jets: m/h (or mph), km/h (or kph) Snails: cm/s (why not km/h?) Falling objects: m/s Trains: How about mm/h ? (Nope!) Calculating speed     S = d/t If I travel 100 kilometer in one hour then I have a speed of… 100 km/h If I travel 1 meter in 1 second then I have a speed of…. 1 m/s Average speed  Speed is usually NOT CONSTANT    Ex. Cars stop and go regularly Runners go slower uphill than downhill Average speed = total distance traveled/total time it took. Calculating Average Speed   It took me 1 hour to go 40 km on the interstate. Then it took me 2 more hours to go 20 km using the surface streets. Total Distance:   Total Time:   40 km + 20 km = 60 km 1 h + 2 h = 3 hr Ave. Speed:  total d/total t = 60 km/3 h = 20 km/h Total _ Dist. Ave. _ Speed  Total _ time Question    I travelled 25 km in 10 minutes. How fast am I going in m/s? 25,000 meters in 600 seconds 41.7 m/s Question  I ran 1000 m in 3 minutes. Then ran another 1000 m uphill in 7 minutes. What is my average speed? A) 100 m/min TotalDist. = 1000 m + 1000 m = 2000 m  B) 2000 m/min TotalTime 3 min + 7 min = 10 min C) 10=m/min  D) 200 m/min Ave speed = total dist/total time =  E) 20 m/min 2000m/10 min = 200 m/min = D Velocity  Velocity – the SPEED and DIRECTION of an object.  Example: An airplane moving North at 500 mph  A missile moving towards you at 200 m/s  Question   What is the difference between speed and velocity? Speed is just distance/time. Velocity includes direction as well. Graphing Speed: Distance vs. Time Graphs Denver Phoenix Graphing Speed: Distance vs. Time Graphs Speed = Slope = Rise/ Rise Graphing Speed: Distance vs. Time Graphs Speed = Slope = Rise/ Rise=? 600 km 3h Graphing Speed: Distance vs. Time Graphs Speed = Slope = Rise/ Rise=? 600 km 3h Rise/ Distance (km) Different Slopes 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Slope = Rise/Run = 1 km/1 hr = 1 km/hr Slope = Rise/Run = 0 km/1 hr = 0 km/hr Rise = 2 km Rise = 0 km Run = 1 hr Run = 1 hr Slope = Rise/Run = 2 km/1 hr = 2 km/hr Rise = 1 km Run = 1 hr 1 2 3 4 Time (hr) 5 6 7 Question Below=isTotal a distance vs. time graph ofkm/6 hr Average Speed distance/Total time = 12 my position =during a race. What was 2 km/hr my AVERAGE speed for the entire race? 14 Distance (km) 12 10 8 Rise = 12 km 6 4 2 0 0 1 2 3 Time Run = (hr) 6 hr 4 5 6 Question   What does the slope of a distance vs. time graph show you about the motion of an object? It tells you the SPEED Question  Below is a distance vs. time graph for 3 runners. Who is the fastest? 7 Distance (mi.) 6 5 Bob Jane Leroy 4 3 2 1 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 35 Time (h) Leroy is the fastest. He completed the race in 3 hours Acceleration   Acceleration = commonly thought of as “speeding up” Acceleration – the rate at which velocity changes  Can be an: Increase in speed  Decrease in speed  Change in direction  Types of acceleration  Increasing speed   Decreasing speed   Example: Car speeds up at green light screeeeech Example: Car slows down at stop light Changing Direction  Example: Car takes turn (can be at constant speed) Question   How can a car be accelerating if its speed is a constant 65 km/h? If it is changing directions it is accelerating Calculating Acceleration  If an object is moving in a straight line Final _ speed  Initial _ Speed Accelerati on  Time  Units of acceleration:  m/s2 Calculating Acceleration Final _ Speed  Initial _ Speed Accelerati on  Time 16m / s  0m / s  4s  4m / s 2 0s 0 m/s 1s 4 m/s 2s 8 m/s 3s 12 m/s 4s 16 m/s Question  A skydiver accelerates from 20 m/s to 40 m/s in 2 seconds. What is the skydiver’s average acceleration? Final _ speed  Initial _ speed Accel  Time 40m / s  20m / s 20m / s   2s 2s 2  10m / s Newton’s Second Law of Motion Answers the question, “How fast will objects accelerate, relative to their mass and the force applied to them?” Acceleration  An unbalanced force causes something to accelerate. Acceleration   Acceleration of an object is directly related to the size of the unbalanced force and the direction of the force. It will accelerate in the direction you push or pull it. In general…. Small Force = Small Acceleration F a So….if you push twice as hard, it accelerates twice as much. In general…. Large Force F = Large Acceleration a But there is a twist….   Acceleration is INVERSELY related to the mass of the object. Force = Mass X Acceleration -orF=ma …where F is the force, m is the mass, and a is the acceleration. The units are Newtons (N) for force, kilograms (kg) for mass, and meters per second squared (m/s2) for acceleration. The other forms of the equation can be used to solve for mass or acceleration. m=F/a and a=F/m In other words…..using the same amount of force…. F Small acceleration Large Mass a Large acceleration F Small Mass a Newton’s Second Law  Newton, observed those “rules” of acceleration and came up with his Second Law of Motion. It is both a formula and a scientific “law.” Newton’s Second Law The acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the net force & inversely proportional to it’s mass. Thus:  F = ma  Force = Mass x Acceleration  Newton’s Second Law Example:  Engineers at the Johnson Space Center must determine the net force needed for a rocket to achieve an acceleration of 70 m/s2. If the mass of the rocket is 45,000 kg, how much net force must the rocket develop?  Using Newton's second law, F=ma  F=(45,000 kg)(70 m/s2) = 3,150,000 kg m/s2 OR F=3,150,000 N  Note that the units kg m/s2 and newtons are equivalent; that is, 1 kg m/s2 = 1 N Kinetic Energy   If an object is moving, it has energy. (Be careful, the converse of this statement is not always true!) This energy is called kinetic energy - the energy of motion. Kinetic Energy   An object’s kinetic energy depends on: the object’s mass.   Kinetic energy is directly proportional to mass. the object’s speed.  Kinetic energy is directly proportional to the object’s speed. square of the Kinetic Energy  In symbols: 1 2 KE = mv 2 Kinetic Energy  Kinetic energy is a scalar quantity. (Scalars are quantities that are fully described by a magnitude, or numerical value alone; not a vector.)  Common units of kinetic energy: Joules  An object with mass of 1 kg, moving at 1 m/s, has a kinetic energy of 0.5 Joule. Kinetic Energy  Determine the kinetic energy of a 625-kg roller coaster car that is moving with a speed of 18.3 m/s.     KE = 0.5*m*v2 KE = (0.5) * (625 kg) * (18.3 m/s)2 KE = 1.05 x105 Joules Or 104,653 Joules Potential Energy   Sometimes work is not converted directly into kinetic energy. Instead it is “stored”, or “hidden”. Potential energy is stored energy or stored work. Potential Energy  Potential energy is energy that an object (system) has due to its position or arrangement.
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            