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Physics 151 Week 11 Day 2 Topics: Forces, Apparent Weight, & Friction Energy Dot Produce Work Conservation of Energy with Work Work-Energy Theorem Momentum Conservation of Momentum Collisions 1-D Collisions 2-D Collisions Work and Impulse Exam 2 comments: Once exams are graded, I will make score adjustments as needed if the class average is below normal for this class due to time pressure. However, in this class, you will be time limited on midterms What can you do? • Make sure you know and understand key concepts so you can apply them quickly and correctly • Practice doing homework problems with good solutions for time => this week, take 30 minutes, next week 25 minutes, next 20 minutes • Read through the exam in the first minutes. Identify which parts you can do quickly and well to maximize points • Don’t rush. It’s better to do three parts well, then four parts badly • If you don’t have time to finish a problem, tell me what you would do if you had more time. More correct detail => more points Course Grading Every students’ overall score will be calculated two ways 1. As stated in the syllabus 2. By Exams only • 2 best midterm scores 30% each • Final Exam Score Total 40% 100% The higher overall score will be used to calculate your grade. Note, over 95% of the time, syllabus grading will result in the higher score. Homework scores correlate strongly with exam performance. Slide 4-19 Dot Product Dot product or scalar product is a way of multiplying two vectors to get a scalar result Dot products can be calculated either independent of a coordinate system where is the angle between the two vectors r r r A B A B cos Note that in this case the sign of the dot product only depends on the angle Or in component form r A B Ax Bx Ay By Az Bz Slide 4-19 Dot Product: Example 1 Dot produce or scalar product is a way of multiplying two vectors to get a scalar result Dot products can be calculated either independent of a coordinate system where is the angle between the two vectors r r r A B A B cos Vector A has a magnitude of 4 units Vector B has a magnitude of 3 units Angle between them = 60 degrees r A B 4 units 3units cos(60) 6units Dot Product: Example 2 Dot product or scalar product is a way of multiplying two vectors to get a scalar result Dot products in component form r A B Ax Bx Ay By Az Bz Let A (1, 2, 3) and So r AgB 1* 4 2 * 5 3* 6 32 B (4, 5,6) Slide 4-19 Example 3 Using a dot product to find angle We know 2 ways to calculate the dot product r r r A B A B cos r A B Ax Bx Ay By Az Bz Put these two equations for dot product = to each other r A B cos Ax Bx Ay By Az Bz Ax Bx Ay By Az Bz r r cos A B Slide 4-19 Work Definition of Work (in physics) For constant Force r r r r Work W F g r F r cos Like all energy terms, work is a scalar Work is the overall effect of a force applied over a displacement. We can talk about the work done by any force or the work done by the net force. For non-constant force Work = area under Fx vs. x graph Note that work can be positive or negative sign depends on cosine of angle between the vectors Choosing the System Slide 10-16 Work by an External Force Conservation of Energy Equation KEi + PEgi +Pesi + Esys = KEf + PEgf + Pesf + Eth Esys = Wext where Wext = work done by external forces Eth= - Wfriction Slide 4-19 Sign of Work Questions Answer these questions: • For each of the forces, in the force diagrams below, the work done by that force is (A) positive, (B) negative, (C) zero (D) Can’t tell Fn, tableM 1 Fnet, M 2 Fnet, M 1 FT ,stringM 2 FT , stringM 1 Fg, EarthM 1 Fg,EarthM 2 Slide 10-23 The Law of Conservation of Momentum In terms of the initial and final total momenta: Pf = Pi In terms of components: Slide 9-18 Slide 9-19 Summary Slide 9-30 Elastic and Inelastic Collisions Momentum is always conserved in collisions and explosions. Elastic collision => momentum & mechanical energy are conserved Inelastic collision => momentum conserved, mechanical energy is not Mechanical Energy = KE + PE In an elastic collision, both objects return to their original state (no change in shape, no deformation) momentum & mechanical energy are conserved In an inelastic collision, one or both objects deform and change shape. Some mechanical energy goes into changing the objects shape and is transformed into Ethermal Inelastic collision => momentum conserved, mechanical energy is not Inelastic Collisions Momentum is always conserved in collisions and explosions. Inelastic collision => momentum conserved, mechanical energy is not First, we’ll consider perfectly inelastic collisions: A perfectly inelastic collision results whenever the two objects move off at a common final velocity. Elastic Collisions In an elastic collision, both momentum and mechanical energy are conserved Summary