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Forces • Contact Forces - those resulting from physical contact between objects – – – – Normal Force Friction Tension (spring/rope) Compression • Action at a Distance Force Field Forces – Gravity – Electromagnetic – Strong Nuclear Force • Holds Nucleus Together – Weak Nuclear Force • Decay Process •Force - The capacity to cause physical change in the motion of an object. Newton’s First Law – Law of Inertia • An object at rest will remain at rest – and an object in motion will continue in motion at a constant velocity (Magnitude and Direction) – unless acted upon by a nonzero net external force. • Inertia – The tendency of a body to maintain its state of rest or constant velocity. • Equilibrium - A condition during which the velocity of an object is constant or the object is at rest. The net force acting on the object is zero. • Inertial Reference Frame – Place where Newton's Laws are valid. (at rest or constant velocity) – Non-inertial reference frames are accelerating. Weight and Mass • Mass - A term used to quantify/measure inertia. – – – – Has SI units of kilogram. The amount of a substance. The quantity of matter. Scalar • Weight - Force exerted on an object while it is under the influence of a gravitational field. – Vector • Density - The amount of a substance per unit volume. Newton’s Second Law • The acceleration of an object is – directly proportional to the net force acting on it – and inversely proportional to its mass. – The direction of the acceleration is in the direction of the net force acting on the object. F a m F vector sum of all forces F ma Units Physical Quantity Length Dimension Symbol [L] SI MKS SI CGS m cm US Customary ft Mass [M] kg g slug Time [T] sec sec sec Acceleration [L/T2] m/s2 cm/s2 ft/s2 dyne g-cm/s2 pound (lb) slug- ft/s2 Force [M-L/T2] newton (N) kg-m/s2 1 lb 4.45 N Alternate Statement of the Second Law • Momentum - The quantity of an object’s motion. The product of an object’s mass and velocity. p mv • The time rate of change of the momentum of an object is equal to the resulting net external force acting on the object. dp F dt Weight and Mass • Mass - A term used to quantify/measure inertia. – – – – Has SI units of kilogram. The amount of a substance. The quantity of matter. Scalar • Weight - Force exerted on an object while it is under the influence of a gravitational field. – Vector FG mg mgjˆ • Density - The amount of a substance per unit volume. Example 1 • What constant net force must be used to bring a 1500 kg car to rest from a speed of 100 km/hr within a distance of 55 m? Newton’s Third Law • If two objects interact (contact or at a distance), • the force exerted on body 1 by body 2 (F12) On By • is equal and opposite the force exerted on body 2 by body 1 (- F21 ). Cautions on the Third Law • The forces of an action-reaction pair always act on different bodies. They do not combine to give a net force and cannot cancel each other. Model Assumptions • Surfaces are frictionless (*) • The mass of a rope or string is zero. • The tension in a rope is the same everywhere in the rope. (The force(s) it exerts is(are) on the object(s) it is attached to). • Ropes are non-extensive (do not get longer) • A pulley has no friction or mass (*). It simply redirects the tension in another direction. Problem Solving Approach • • • • Read the problem. Several times if necessary. Write down the information that is given or looked up in a table. Write down what is to be found. Draw a picture or sketch. Draw and label with forces, velocities, accelerations, etc. Isolate the object(s) of interest. – Free body diagram. – Specify your coordinate system. – Resolve forces along these coodinate axes. • Write down the fundamental relationships/definitions/formula you need to solve the problem. – • • • • Apply Newton’s laws in component form along coordinate axes. Manipulate the equations. # Equations = # Unknowns. Check that your answer makes sense. Actually plug in numbers at the very end. Include unit analysis. Box your final answer. Include units and check for significant digits. Big Picture • If the object is at rest or moving at a constant velocity it is in equilibrium and the 1st Law applies. • If the the forces don’t seem balanced the object will accelerate and the second law applies F 0 F ma Example 2 • A 10 kg box is sitting on the table. • You pull up with a string attached to the box and apply 40 N. • What is the normal force applied by the table on the box? Example 3 • Two boxes are connected by a cord and pulled by a second cord attached to the first box with a force of 40.0 N • The two boxes have masses of 12.0 kg and 10.0 kg as shown. • Find the acceleration of each box and the tension in the cord Example 4 – Hanging Objects 2 1 T2 T1 1 2 mg m F 0 Resolve into components T1 1 T2 sin 2 T1 sin 1 T2 2 T2 cos 2 T1 cos 1 mg mg F 0 T cos T cos F 0 T sin T sin mg x y 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 Block on a smooth incline plane FN mg sin mg cos mg F 0 F mg cos F ma mgsin y N x Atwood’s Machine (a pulley) Object 1: Elevator Car F y FT m1g m1a Object 2: Counterweight F y FT m2g m2a Incline plane (no friction) • m2 = 7 kg • Which way do blocks move? • What is acceleration? • What is tension in cord? Inside the elevator (non-inertial frame) While moving up at constant velocity: F y FN mg 0 Scale reads correctly While slowing down: F y FN mg ma Scale reads light!