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Transcript
Newton’s Laws of Motion Newton’s First Law of Motion Newton’s First Law of Motion “Objects tend to keep on doing whatever it is that they are doing unless another force acts on them” The Law of Inertia!! Objects will stay in motion/at rest until acted upon by a force Mass is a measure of Inertia • The mass of an object corresponds to it’s inertia. – Ex. Which has more inertia: – An elephant or a feather? – A car or a semi truck? The more mass an object has, the more inertia it has!! Mass is not the same as Volume Mass: a measure of the amount of matter in an object Volume: a measure of the amount of space occupied by an object Mass is not the same as weight!! Mass: the amount of matter in an object Weight: A measure of gravity’s pull on an object Newton’s Second Law of Motion Newton’s nd 2 Law of Motion • The force acting on an object is equal to the mass of the object multiplied by its acceleration. Force = mass x acceleration F=m•a Acceleration Definition: the rate of change of velocity An object is said to accelerate when it does any one of the following: • Slows down • Speeds up • Changes direction Which of the following shows an example of acceleration? Why or why not? • A car going from a dead stop to 60 mph. • A car going around a turn while maintaining a constant speed. • A car slowing down as it rounds a turn. • A car coming to a stop. • A car going down a straight stretch of road at 35 mph. Which car or cars (red, green, and/or blue) are undergoing an acceleration? Study each car individually to determine the answer. Forces and Acceleration • In order for an object to accelerate, a force has to act on it (either a push or a pull) • Usually, more than one force acts • Acceleration depends on the net force Newton’s Third Law of Motion Newton’s Third Law of Motion Whenever one object exerts a force on a second object, the second object exerts an equal and opposite force on the first. Or more simply… For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. Forces • Forces are not simply single actions (a push or a pull) • They are really interactions between two objects – Ex. A car crashing into a tree: • The car exerts force on the tree • The tree exerts force on the car Forces always occur in pairs!!! What is the force pair acting on you as you sit in your chair at your desk? What is the force pair acting as you walk across the floor? Action and Reaction Forces • Neither can exist without the other • They are equal in strength and opposite in direction Action and Reaction Forces • Action: Object A exerts a force on object B. • Reaction: Object B exerts a force on object A. Which exerts more force, the Earth pulling the moon, or the moon pulling the earth? Give the action/reaction forces that would occur when a football player tackled another football player. What is the action reaction force pair when a cannonball is shot from a cannon? • The force the cannon exerts on the cannonball is exactly the same as the force the cannonball exerts back on the cannon. • Why then, if the forces are the same, does the cannon not accelerate back as fast as the cannonball accelerates forward?