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Physics Teacher Notes - Grothaus Chapter 7 – Newton’s Third Law of Motion Title: Newton’s Third Law of Motion – Action and Reaction *** For every force, there is an equal and opposite force *** Can’t touch something without it touching back, can’t exert a force on something without it exerting a force back (can you clap with only one hand?) Demonstrations: wall, spring scales, bathroom scales, balloon Kayak paddles push back on the water, but the water pushes back which is why the kayak goes forward 7.1 Forces and Interactions A Force is a push or a pull – this is the simple explanation Not a true indication of what is happening: A force is always part of a mutual action that involves another force A mutual action is an interaction between one thing and another Example: hammer and nail, phone book friction – force indicator Question: Does a stick of dynamite contain force? 7.2 Newton’s Third Law Newton’s third law states that whenever one object exerts a force on a second object, the second object exerts an equal and opposite force on the first object. (“To every action there is always an equal and opposing reaction”) One force is called the action force and the other is called the reaction force Example: swimming, walking across the floor vs. walking on ice, dog wagging his tail 7.3 Identifying Action and Reaction Conceptual Physics Page 1 of 3 Chapter 7 – Newton’s Third Law of Motion Physics Teacher Notes - Grothaus What is the pair of action and reaction forces in the case of a falling boulder? Not always obvious what these are. To identify a pair of action-reaction forces, first identify the interacting objects A and B, and if the action is A on B, then the reaction is B on A. In the above pair, the interaction is the gravitational attraction between the boulder and the Earth. Action: Earth exerting force on boulder Reaction: Boulder exerting a force on Earth Why doesn’t the Earth move up towards the boulder? Is this true? Reaction forces occur slightly after the action force is applied. NO!! They occur simultaneously See page 109, figure 7.5 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jHbyQ_AQP8c “What if we all jumped at once?” 7.4 Action and Reaction on Different Masses Look at the interaction between a falling boulder and the Earth. The boulder pulls up the Earth with as much force as the Earth pulls down on the boulder. The masses are very different. Newton’s second law states 𝑎 that 𝑎 = . Both Earth and the boulder accelerate! /𝑎 Use See-Saw to look at what happens! Force and Mass Firing a cannon: Figure 7.7 p. 110 The cannon “kicks” Conceptual Physics Page 2 of 3 Physics Teacher Notes - Grothaus Cannonball: Chapter 7 – Newton’s Third Law of Motion Cannon: A given force exerted on a small mass produces a greater acceleration than the same force exerted on a large mass. Cannon vs. Cannonball explains rocket propulsion. Balloon: air escapes – balloon accelerates Rocket accelerates much the same way. It recoils from the exhaust gases ejected from its engine Each molecule acts like a tiny cannonball Common misconception: rocket is propelled by the impact of the gases against the atmosphere. Better above atmosphere – no air resistance Lift Helicopter’s rotors are shaped to force air particles downward (action) and the air forces the blades upward (reaction) Same with an airplane: the slightly tilted wings and jet propulsion 7.7 Action Equals Reaction - doing You can only hit something as hard as it can hit you back. Wall, paper, etc. Conceptual Physics Page 3 of 3