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Chapter 12 Page 356-382 Chapter 12 Section 1 Pg. 356-362 What is a Force? • _____- a push or a pull that acts on an object • A force can cause a resting object to move, or it can ________ a moving object by changing the object’s speed or direction • Forces can be measured What is a Force? • Units of Force – Force is measured in _______ (N) – 1 newton is the force that causes a 1-kg mass to accelerate at a rate of 1 m/s2 • 1 N = 1 kg*m/s2 • Representing Forces – Use an _____ to represent the direction and strength of a force – Direction of arrow = direction of the ____ (weight always acts downward) – Length of arrow = strength or _________of force Combining Forces • ______ force arrows to show the result of how forces combine • Forces in the same direction ___ together • Forces in the opposite direction SUBTRACT from one another • ________- overall force acting on an object after all the forces are combined Combining Forces • Balanced Forces – Net force can be ____: when the same amount of force is being pulled in ________ directions – When the forces on an object are ______, the net force is zero and there is no change in the object’s motion – Examples: tug of war, arm wrestling Combining Forces • Unbalanced Forces – A force that results when the net force acting on an object is not _____ to zero – When an ________ force acts on an object, the object accelerates – Forces in opposite direction can also ______ to produce an unbalanced force (tug of war with a winner) Friction • ______- a force that opposes the motion of objects that touch as they move past each other • Friction acts at the _______ where objects are in contact. • Without friction- walking would be impossible, food would slide off your fork, etc • There are 4 main types of friction: static friction, sliding friction, rolling friction, and fluid friction Static Friction • The friction force that acts on objects that are ___ moving. • _____ acts in the direction ______ to that of the applied force Sliding Friction • A force that _______ the direction of motion of an object as it slides over a surface • Sliding friction is ____ than static friction, so less force is needed to keep an object moving than to _____ it moving • See example at the bottom of page 359 Rolling Friction • When a _____ object rolls across a flat floor, both the object and the floor are ____ slightly out of shape. This change in shape at the point of _______ contact is the cause of rolling friction, the friction force that acts on rolling objects. Fluid Friction • The force of fluid friction, ______ the motion of an object through a fluid • Fluid friction ________ with speed • An object moving through the air is known as ______________ • Example: you feel fluid friction when stirring thick cake batter (the faster you stir the greater the friction) Friction Gravity • Gravity- a force that acts between any two ______ – an attractive force, _____ objects together – Gravity is what holds us to Earth – Gravity can act over large distances – Earth’s gravity acts _________ toward the center of Earth Gravity • Falling Objects – Gravity causes objects to _______ downward, whereas air resistance acts in the direction opposite to the motion and reduces acceleration – When objects fall they gain speed, with increasing speed comes ________ air resistance. If an object falls for a long time, the upward force of air resistance becomes equal to the downward force of gravity at this point the forces are _________, acceleration is zero and the object continues to fall at a constant velocity – Terminal velocity: constant velocity of a falling object when the force of air _______ equals the force of gravity. Gravity *Air drag is the same as air resistance. Projectile Motion • Projectile Motion- the motion of a _____ object (projectile) after it is given an initial forward velocity. The only forces acting upon it are air resistance and ______ • When you throw a ball it actually follows a _____ path because of gravity and air resistance, example of projectile motion Projectile Motion Newton’s First and Second Laws of Motion Chapter 12 Section 2 Page 363-369 Aristotle • Greek scientist and philosopher • (384 B.C. – 322 B.C.) • Made many scientific discoveries through careful observation and _______ reasoning. • Not always correct • _________ proposed that force is required to keep an object moving at constant speed Galileo • Italian scientist (1564-1642) • Studied about the _____ • By rolling balls down wooden ramps, he studied how ______ produces constant acceleration. • Concluded that moving objects not subjected to ______ or any other force would continue to move indefinitely Newton • Isaac Newton built on the work of scientists such as _______ • Published work in a book entitled Principia – Defined ____________ – Introduced his laws of motion • Discovered that gravity affects all objects in the _______ Newton’s First Law of Motion • 1st Law states: The state of motion of an object does ____ change as long as the net force acting on the object is _____ – An object at rest remains at rest, and an object in motion remains in motion with the ____ speed and direction unless acted upon – Sometimes referred to as the law of inertia • _______- the tendency of an object to resist a change in its motion Newton’s First Law of Motion Newton’s First Law of Motion • Think: if you are in a moving car that is involved in a front-end collision, the collision makes the car stop suddenly, but because you have inertia, you continue moving forward – A seat belt and airbag work by exerting force, opposing the forward motion Newton’s First Law of Motion Newton’s Second Law of Motion • An _________ force causes an object’s velocity to change (the object accelerates) • _________ of an object depends upon its mass – Mass- a measure of the inertia of an object and depends on the amount of ______ the object contains – Acceleration is directly _________ to the net force acting on it (if force is doubled, the acceleration doubles) Newton’s Second Law of Motion • 2nd Law states: the __________ of an object is equal to the net force acting on it divided by the object’s mass – Doubling the mass cuts acceleration in half – Units: Force is Newton (N) or kg*m/s2 Mass is kg Acceleration is m/s2 Newton’s Second Law of Motion • Acceleration of an object is ______ in the same direction as the net force • This law also applies when a ________acts in the direction opposite to the object’s motion – The force produces a _________ that reduces the speed • This is the principle used by automobile seat belts Newton’s Second Law of Motion Newton’s Second Law of Motion • Math practice page 367 – # 1-4 Weight and Mass • Weight and Mass are _____ the same • Weight- the force of gravity acting on an object – an object’s weight is the ______ of the object’s mass and acceleration due to ______ (9.8 m/s2) acting on it – Same units as force Weight and Mass • The weight formula is basically Newton’s 2nd law. • Mass and Weight are _________ – Doubling the mass also doubles the weight • Mass is a measure of the _____ of an object – The amount of matter in an object • Weight is a measure of the _____ of gravity acting on an object • Think about an astronaut on Earth and on the Moon Newton’s Third Law of Motion and Momentum Chapter 12 Section 3 Page 372-377 Newton’s Third Law of Motion • Force _____ exit alone, it always exist in ____ • 3rd Law states: whenever an object exerts a force on a second object, the second object exerts an equal and opposite force on the first object – The two forces are called _____________________ • Think about bumper cars Action and Reaction Forces • In bumper cars… – Action force is the force your bumper car exerts on the other car – Reaction force is the force the other car exerts on your car – The 2 forces are ______ in size and opposite in direction Action-Reaction Forces and Motion Action-Reaction Forces Do Not Cancel • The forces do ____ cancel because the action and reaction forces do not act on the same _____. • Only when equal and ________ forces act on the same object do they result in a net force of zero. Momentum • ________- the product of an object’s mass and its velocity – An object with a ____ momentum is hard to stop – An object has large momentum if the product of its mass and ________ is large – Any object at rest has _____ momentum – Units are kilogram-meters per second (kg*m/s) Momentum= mass x velocity Conservation of Momentum • In physics, conservation means that something has a _______ value • Conservation of Momentum- momentum does not increase or decrease • The law of conservation of momentum- if no net force acts on a ______, then the total momentum of the system does not change • In a closed system, the loss of momentum of one object ______ the gain in momentum of another object (momentum is conserved) Conservation of Momentum Conservation of Momentum Universal Forces Chapter 12 Section 4 Page 378-382 Electromagnetic Forces • Electromagnetic Forces is associated with _______ particles • Electric force and magnetic force are the only forces that can _____ attract and repel Electric Forces • Electric forces act between charged objects or particles such as ________ and protons – Objects with opposite charges attract one another – Objects with _____ charges repel one another Magnetic Forces • Magnetic forces act on ______ metals, on the poles of magnets, and on moving charges • Magnets have two ______, north and south (these 2 attract each other) – Poles that are alike repel each other Nuclear Forces • Think about the ______ of an atom – 2 forces, the strong nuclear force and the weak nuclear force, act within the nucleus to hold it together • ______ Nuclear Force- a powerful force of attraction that acts only on the neutrons and protons in the nucleus, holding them together • _____ Nuclear Force- an attractive force that acts only over a short range Gravitational Force • _______- the weakest universal force, but the most effective force over long distances • Gravitational Force- an attractive force that acts between any two _____ • Newton’s law of universal gravitation states that every object in the ________ attracts every other object Gravitational Force • Gravity acts over large distances – Gravitational force between 2 objects is proportional to their masses and ________ rapidly as the distance between the masses ________ • The greater the mass, the greater the gravitational force Gravitational Force • The Earth, Moon and Tides – The moon has ______, so according to Newton’s 1st law, it should continue to move along in a straight path until acted upon by a ______ • The force is Earth’s gravitational force which pulls the moon toward it- causes a nearly ______ orbit around Earth • The pull causes 2 bulges in Earth’s oceans (side closest to the moon and farthest from the moon), since Earth also has rotation, this causes high and low tide – _______________- a center-directed force that continuously changes the direction of an object to make it move in a circle Gravitational Force Gravitational Force • Satellites in Orbit – Much like the moon, the satellite needs only the _________ force provided by gravity and its inertia to maintain its orbit – Satellites in ____ orbit, however, are slowed by friction with Earth’s atmosphere. As it loses speed, it also loses altitude, eventually burning in the atmosphere • Uses of Satellites – Monitor Earth’s weather, create detailed radar maps of Earth’s surface, use telescopes to gaze deep into space, study Earth’s climate, allow for cell phone and tv signals Works Cited Frank, Wysession, & Yancopoulos. “Chapter 12 Forces and Motion.” Physical Concepts in Action. Upper Saddle River: Pearson, 2010. 356-382. Print.