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Chapter 19 Section 1 Measuring Motion Question of the Day Write a description on your paper of your position in the classroom using a reference Point (starting point) and a set of directions. For example, you might say, “I sit three desks behind Beth’s desk,” or “I sit 12 floor tiles east of the door and 10 meters north of the Smart Board.” Then, write a description to your home in your neighborhood. Chapter 19 Matter in Motion Chapter Standard MOTION - 3 Apply proper equations to solve basic problems pertaining to distance, time, speed, and velocity. Chapter 19 Matter in Motion Chapter Preview Section 1 Measuring Motion Section 2 What Is a Force? Section 3 Friction: A Force That Opposes Motion Section 4 Gravity: A Force of Attraction Chapter 19 Section 1 Measuring Motion Today’s Objectives • Describe the motion of something by the position of it in relation to a reference point. • Identify the two factors that determine speed. • Explain the difference between speed and velocity. • Analyze the relationship between velocity and acceleration. • Demonstrate that changes in motion can be measured and represented on a graph. Chapter 19 Section 1 Measuring Motion Observing Motion by Using a Reference Point • Motion is an object’s change in position relative to a reference point. •A reference point is an object that appears to stay in place. •The Earth’s surface is a common reference point. Chapter 19 Section 1 Measuring Motion Observing Motion by Using a Reference Point • The direction of an object’s motion can be described with a reference direction, such as north, south, east, west, up, or down. Chapter 19 Section 1 Measuring Motion Speed Depends on Distance and Time • Speed is the distance traveled divided by the time interval during which the motion occurred. • The standard SI unit for speed is meters per second (m/s). •Other examples of speed units. •Kilometers per hour (km/h) •Feet per second (ft/s) •Miles per hour (mi/h) Chapter 19 Section 1 Measuring Motion Speed Depends on Distance and Time, continued • To determine average speed the total distance is divided by the total time. average speed = total distance total time •Speed can be shown on a graph of distance versus time, as shown on the next slide. Chapter 19 Section 1 Measuring Motion Chapter 19 Section 1 Measuring Motion Chapter 19 Section 1 Measuring Motion Velocity: Speed with Direction •You know what speed is now, but what is velocity? •Velocity is the speed of an object in a particular direction. • Speed and velocity are two different things. Velocity must include a reference direction (example north, south, left, or right). Chapter 19 Section 1 Measuring Motion Velocity: Speed with Direction • Changing Velocity •You can think of velocity as how fast an object’s position changes. •An object’s velocity is constant only if its speed and direction don’t change. • Combining Velocities •You can combine different velocities to find the resultant velocity or “net velocity”. Chapter 19 Section 1 Measuring Motion Chapter 19 Section 1 Measuring Motion Acceleration • Acceleration is the rate at which velocity changes over time; an object accelerates if its speed, or direction, or both change. • Increase velocity, you get a positive acceleration. • Decrease velocity, you get a negative acceleration, or deceleration. Chapter 19 Section 1 Measuring Motion Acceleration, continued •You can find average acceleration by using the equation: average acceleration = final velocity starting velocity time it takes to change velocity • Velocity is meters per second (m/s) •Time is expressed in seconds (s). •So acceleration is expressed in meters per second per second, or (m/s)/s, which equals m/s2. Chapter 19 Section 1 Measuring Motion Chapter 19 Section 1 Measuring Motion Acceleration, continued • Acceleration can be shown on a graph of velocity versus time. Chapter 19 Matter in Motion Chapter Standard MOTION - 3 Apply proper equations to solve basic problems pertaining to distance, time, speed, and velocity. Chapter 19 Section 2 What Is a Force? Question of the Day Look around the room and think about the objects you see touching another object. A force is always exerted by one object on another object. Answer the following questions on your paper. Where do you see a force happening in the room right now? Which object is exerting the force, and which is receiving it? Chapter 19 Section 2 What Is a Force? Today’s Objectives • Describe forces, and explain how forces act on objects. • Determine the net force (total force) when more than one force is acting on an object. • Compare “balanced” and “unbalanced” forces. • Describe ways that unbalanced forces cause changes in motion. Chapter 19 Section 2 What Is a Force? What is a Force? •Have you ever wondered what makes things move? •A force is a push or a pull exerted on an object in order to change the motion of the object; force has size and direction. • Forces are what make objects move. • The SI unit of force is the newton (N). Chapter 19 Section 2 What Is a Force? What is a Force?, continued • It is not always easy to tell what is exerting a force or what is receiving a force. For example, you cannot see what exerts the force that pulls magnets to refrigerators. •What force does that? •What keeps the air we breath near the Earth’s surface? • You cannot see that the air around you is held near Earth’s surface by a force called gravity. Chapter 19 Section 2 What Is a Force? Determining Net Force • Usually, more than one force is acting on an object at the same time. •Net force is the combination all of the forces acting on an object. • Chapter 19 Section 2 What Is a Force? Determining Net Force, continued •Finding out the net force on an object depends on the directions of the forces. •Forces in the same direction just add the forces. • Forces in opposite directions just subtract the small one from the larger on and keep the LARGER direction. Chapter 19 Section 2 What Is a Force? Chapter 19 Section 2 What Is a Force? Balanced and Unbalanced Forces • When an object has a net force of 0 N acting on it, the forces are called balanced. • Balanced forces will not cause a change in the motion of a moving object. •Balanced forces do not cause a still object to start moving. Chapter 19 Section 2 What Is a Force? Balanced and Unbalanced Forces, continued •When the net force on an object is NOT equal to 0 N, the forces are unbalanced. • Unbalanced forces causes an object to move.