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Physics 121 Mechanics Instructor Karine Chesnel April 14, 2009 Final Review Lecture notes are posted on www.physics.byu.edu/faculty/chesnel/physics121.aspx Final review 04/14/09 Quiz # 40 Have you evaluated the class on Route Y? YES! Click! Do not forget to evaluate this class online until April 15th Thank you! Physics 121 Winter 2009 * Today * last lecture Last assignment: • Online homework 24: (70pts) until midnight today! http://gardner.byu.edu/121w2/homework.html For any question after this class: Karine Chesnel N319 ESC 801-422-5687 [email protected] I will be available until Friday April 24th Physics 121 Winter 2009 - section 2 Class statistics Class Average First test Second test Third test 83 /100 68/100 74/100 Test average Final Homework Labs quizzes 75/100 85/100 96/100 113/100 (30%) (20%) (25%) (15%) (10%) Prepare well for the FINAL test! Try to increase your average test score Final exam • Friday April 17 through Wednesday April 22 • At the testing center : 8 am – 9 pm (Mo- Fri) 10 am – 4 pm (Sat) • Closed Book • Only bring: - Phys 121 (Chesnel) Memorization sheets (5pages) - Math reference sheet - Pen / pencil - Calculator - your CID • No time limit • Multiple Choice Questions: 30 questions Final Review ch 1 – ch 15 Part I: Kinematics Ch. 1- 4 Part II: Laws of Motion (material points) Ch. 5- 8 Part III: Laws of Motion (Solids rotation) Ch. 9 - 13 Part IV: Oscillatory motion Ch. 15 Part I Kinematics Ch. 1 Physics & measurments • Standard units • Dimensional analysis Ch. 2 Motion in one dimension • Position, velocity, acceleration • Case of constant velocity • Case of constant acceleration • Free falling motion Ch. 3 Vectors • Coordinate systems • Algebra Ch. 4 Motion in two dimensions • Position, velocity, acceleration • Case of constant acceleration • Projectile motion • Circular motion (uniform & non-uniform) • Tangential and radial acceleration Final review 04/14/09 Kinematics The displacement is the difference between two positions x1 Dx= x2 – x1 x2 Average velocity (Instantaneous) velocity Vavg Dx Dt V x ,t Dx dx lim Dt 0 Dt dt The speed is the amplitude of the velocity Average acceleration (Instantaneous) acceleration aavg DV Dt a x ,t DV lim Dt 0 Dt dV dt Final review 04/14/09 Motion under constant velocity V = constant = Slope Dx/Dt x(t) Dx x0 0 Dt x(t) = x0 + v.t Position at t=0 t Final review 04/14/09 Motion under constant acceleration a(t) a = constant 0 t v(t) V(t) is linear Dv v(t) = v0 + a.t v0 0 Dt x(t) t x(t) is parabolic x(t) = x0 +v0.t+ ½ a.t2 x0 t 0 Application: Free Fall a=g Final review 04/14/09 Vectors components Cartesian to polar conversion in 2D y A=(x,y) y (0,0) x x x cos( ) y sin( ) x2 y2 y tan x Final review 04/14/09 Projectile Motion vertical y V1 V0 r0 (0,0) a = g = (0, -g) V2 V3 horizontal x v(t) = v0 + gt r(t) = r0 + V0t + ½ g t2 x(t) = x0 + V0,x t y(t) = y0 + V0,y t - ½ gt2 Uniform velocity along x Free falling along y Final review in two dimensions Ch.4 Motion Review 04/14/09 1/27/09 Projectile Performances Vmax y a=g H V0 (0,0) Hits the ground R x The particle is projected with a speed V0 at angle The maximal height is H = (V0 sin )2 / 2g The horizontal range is R = V02 sin (2) /g Final review 04/14/09 Uniform Circular Motion y V R0 Angular speed is constant: = w.t a (0,0) x Position x = R0 cos (wt) y = R0 sin (wt) Velocity: Vx = - R0 w sin (wt) Vy = R0 w cos (wt) Acceleration ax = - R0 w2 cos (wt) ay = - R0 w2 sin (wt) |V| = R0 w a = - w2 r The acceleration is centripetal. Its magnitude is |a| = R0 w2 Final review 04/14/09 Tangential and radial acceleration General case V3 V1 a a a V2 V is tangential to the trajectory The components of the acceleration in the Frenet frame are: • Tangential at= dV/dt The sign tells if the particle speeds up or slows down • centripetal ac= V2/R Always directed toward the center of curvature R radius of curvature Final review 04/14/09 Generalization t t 2 r (t ) V (t ).dt a (t ).dt t 0 r (t) 0 0 position First derivative Second integration dr V dt t V a.dt velocity 0 Second derivative First integration acceleration 2 dV d r a 2 dt dt a(t) Final review 04/14/09 Quiz # 41 Two racquet balls are thrown in the air at the same time from the same height H. One ball (yellow) is thrown at some angle , with a vertical velocity V0,y, and horizontal velocity V0,x. The other ball (blue) is thrown vertically with the same vertical velocity V0,y y Which ball will hit the floor first? V0,y V0 H A B C The blue ball The yellow ball Both of them For the yellow ball the motion will be given by x(t) = x0 + V0,x t y(t) = y0 + V0,y t - ½ gt2 For the blue ball the motion will be given by y(t) = y0 + V0,y t - ½ gt2 Both balls touch the ground at the same time! Part II Laws of motion Ch. 5 The Laws of Motion • Newton’s first law • Newton’s second law • Newton’s third law Ch. 6 Newton’s laws applications • Circular Motion • Drag forces and viscosity • Friction • Fictitious forces Ch. 7 Work and energy • Work • Kinetic energy • Potential energy • Work- kinetic energy theorem Ch. 8 Conservation of Energy • Mechanical energy • Conservation of energy Final review 04/14/09 Summary of the Laws of Motions First Law: Principle of Inertia In a inertial frame, an isolated system remains at constant velocity or at rest Second Law: Forces and motion In an inertial frame the acceleration of a system is equal to the sum of all external forces divided by the system mass a F m ma F Third Law: Action and reaction If two objects interact, the force exerted by object 1 on object 2 is equal in magnitude and opposite in direction to the force exerted by object 2 on object 1. F1 F2 Final review 04/14/09 Forces of Friction f Two regimes f Static regime F Kinetic regime f max fk F • Static regime F < fs,max= ms N ms is called the coefficient of static friction • Kinetic regime fk= mk N mk is called the coefficient of kinetic friction Final review 04/14/09 Work and kinetic energy Using Newton’s second law F ma WAB B A B F .dr ma.dr A WAB DK K B K A Work- Kinetic energy theorem Defining the kinetic energy 1 K mV 2 2 Final review 04/14/09 Mechanical energy DK Wcons Wnc DK DU Wnc DK DU Wnc D( K U ) Wnc We define the mechanical energy Emech as the sum of kinetic and potential energies Emech K U DEmech Wnc Sometimes, the work of non conservatives forces (friction, collision) is transformed into internal energy Wnc DEint thus DEmech DEint 0 Final review 04/14/09 Closed System with conservative forces only Fcons There are no non-conservative forces working DEmech Wnc 0 The mechanical energy is constant Emech cst K U cst The mechanical energy is conserved between initial and final points K f U f Ki U i Final review 04/14/09 Examples of Potential energy Spring x 1 2 U k kx 2 L0 Gravity U g mgh h g Gravitational field m r M mM U g G r Final review 04/14/09 Quiz # 42 This man is pushing this box of 85kg on the carpet at a constant speed. How is the magnitude of the force he needs to apply? A B C D E F N ` f mg Larger than the weight of the box Same than the weight of the box Same than the friction force Larger than the friction force None of the answers F According to Newton’s law F ma Here the velocity is constant, so F 0 This is true both vertically N mg and horizontally F f and on the other hand Thus F f f k N k mg mg Part III Laws of motion for Solids Ch. 9 Linear Momentum & collision • Linear momentum • Impulse • Collisions 1D and 2D Ch. 10 Rotation of solid • Rotational kinematics • Rotational and translational quantities • Rolling motion • Torque Ch. 11 Angular momentum • Angular momentum • Newton’s law for rotation • Conservation of angular momentum • Precession motion Ch. 12 Static equilibrium and elasticity • Rigid object in equilibrium • Elastic properties of solid Ch. 13 Universal gravitation • Newton’s law of Universal gravitation • Gravitational Field & potential energy • Kepler’s laws and motion of Planets Final review 04/14/09 Linear Momentum & Impulse • The linear momentum of a particle is the product of its mass by its velocity p mV • The Newton’s second law can now be written as • For an isolated system Units: kg.m/s or N.s dp F dt dp 0 dt p cst • The impulse is the integral of the net force, during an abrupt interaction in a short time f I Fdt i • According to Newton’s 2nd law: Dp I Final review 04/14/09 Collisions V1,i V1 ,f V2,f V2,i Elastic collision 1. Conservation of linear momentum p1, f p2, f p1,i p2,i m1V1, f m2V2, f m1V1,i m2V2,i (1) 2. Conservation of kinetic energy 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 m1V1, f m2V2, f m1V1,i m2V2,i 2 2 2 2 Inelastic collision: change in kinetic energy Perfectly inelastic collision: the particles stick together (2) Final review 04/14/09 Collisions 1D • Combining (1) and (2), we get expression for final speeds: V1,i V2,i V1,f V2,f V1, f m1 m2 2m2 V1,i V2,i m1 m2 m1 m2 V2, f m2 m1 2m1 V2,i V1,i m1 m2 m1 m2 • If one of the objects is initially at rest: V1, f m1 m2 V1,i m1 m2 V2, f 2m1 V1,i m1 m2 Collisions 2D y • 3 equations V1,f V1,i 1 2 V2,f • 4 unknow parameters x Final review 04/14/09 Solid characteristics • The center of mass is defined as: M OC r dm dm dV ptot MVC C dm r O MaC F • The moment of inertia of the solid about one axis: I I r dm I’ 2 D I ' I MD 2 Final review 04/14/09 Rotational kinematics • Solid’s rotation Angular position Angular speed w d w dt Angular acceleration dw dt • Linear/angular relationship For any point in the solid Velocity Acceleration Vt Rw • Tangential at R • Centripetal aC Rw 2 • Rotational kinetic energy 1 K I .w 2 2 Final review 04/14/09 Motion of rolling solid w C R P • The kinetic energy of the solid is given by the sum of the translational and rotational components: Ksolid = Kc + Krot Non- sliding situation K solid 1 2 1 2 MVC Iw 2 2 K solid 1 1 2 2 2 MR w Iw 2 2 K solid 1 ( MR 2 I )w 2 2 If all the forces are conservative: U K sol cst Final review 04/14/09 Torque & angular momentum When a force is inducing the rotation of a solid about a specific axis: We define the torque F r F rF sin The angular momentum is defined as Lrp angular momentum Linear momentum Deriving Newton’s second law in rotation dL dt net I L Iw For an object in pure rotation Final review 04/14/09 Solving a problem Static equilibrium • Define the system • Identify and list all the forces • Apply the equality F 0 • Locate the center of mass (where gravity is applied) • Choose a convenient point to calculate the torque (you may choose the point at which most of the forces are applied, so their torque is zero) • List all the torques applied on the same point. • Apply the equality 0 Final review 04/14/09 Gravitational laws Any material object is producing a gravitational field M M g M (r ) G 2 ur r ur r Fg m Any object placed in that field experiences a gravitational force mM Fg mg M (r ) G 2 ur r The gravitational field created by a spherical object is centripetal (field line is directed toward the center) Ug 0 The gravitational potential energy is r mM U g G r Final review 04/14/09 Kepler’s Laws First Law “The orbit of each planet in the solar system is an ellipse with the Sun as one focus ” L cst L0 Second Law “The line joining a planet to the sun sweeps out equal areas during equal time intervals as the planet travels along its orbit.” dA L0 cst dt 2 m Third Law “The square or the orbital period of any planet is proportional to the cube of the semimajor axis of the orbit” 2 4 T 2 GM S 3 R Final review 04/14/09 Satellite Motion Geostationary orbit Tsat =TEarth = 1 day From Newton’s law • Satellite speed VGS 2RGS T (1) The mechanical energy of The satellite on orbit is VGS 2 ME G RGS (2) mM E E G 2 RGS Escape speed Vesc 2GM R Final review 04/14/09 Quiz # 43 A planet has a mass twice the mass of the Earth and a diameter 0.7 times the Earth diameter. What would be the weight, in Newtons, of a 82kg person standing at the surface of this planet? A B C D E 334 N 803 N 3280N 483 N 4830 N The weight of this person at the surface of this planet is Fp mg p G mM p Rp 2 Compared to the weight on earth M p RE Fp mg E M E R p 2 1 82 9.8 2 0.7 2 3280 N 9.8 m/s2 Gravitational field on Earth (Equivalent “mass’ on earth: 334kg!) Part IV Oscillatory motion (ch15) • Harmonic equation and solutions • Energy of harmonic oscillator • Spring motion • Pendulum motions • Damped oscillation • Forced oscillation Final review 04/14/09 Harmonic motion Spring F x d 2x k x0 2 dt m Equation of the motion is Harmonic equation A general solution to this harmonic equation is x(t ) A cos(wt ) Amplitude angular frequency Phase constant (phase at t=0) with k w m Unit = rad/s frequency 1 f 2 Unit = Hz k m period m T 2 k Unit = s Final review 04/14/09 Position, velocity and acceleration Position Velocity x(t ) A cos(wt ) dx V (t ) Aw sin( wt ) dt dV Acceleration a (t ) Aw 2 cos(wt ) dt Position, velocity and acceleration are all sinusoidal functions T x(t) t V(t) Phase quadrature a(t) t Opposite phase t Final review 04/14/09 Energy Emech 1 2 K U kA cst 2 U K 0 t U K 0 x Final review 04/14/09 The pendulum (punctual) 0 The equation for motion is d 2 g 0 2 dt L L The solution for the angle position is (t ) max cos(wt ) m with w The oscillation frequency does not depend on the mass m The period of the oscillation is T 2 w 2 L g g L Final review 04/14/09 Torsional pendulum A torsional pendulum uses the torque induced by torsion to oscillate w For an angular displacement , the torque is k L According to Newton’s second law 0 (rest) The equation for the motion is then dL dt dL d 2 k I 2 dt dt d 2 k 0 2 dt I A general solution is: (t ) max cos(wt ) with k w I Final review 04/14/09 Damped oscillations If the oscillator is moving in a resistive medium: friction, viscosity…. The oscillation will be damped. L0 F A 0 Compressed x The expression of the spring force is The expression of resistive force is Fk kxux Fd bV Applying the Newton’s second law ma Fg Fd d 2x dx m 2 kx b dt dt Damping coefficient Equation of the motion Final review 04/14/09 Damped oscillations The general solution for the motion is b x(t ) A exp t cos(wt ) 2m with b w w02 2m 2 x(t) Underdamped b w0 2m Critical t x(t) b w0 2m T w 0 T t overdamped x(t) b w0 2m t Final review 04/14/09 Forced oscillations An external force is applied to the system, forcing the oscillation to a frequency w The external force is The spring force is If any, resistive force is Fosc F0 sin wt ) Fk kxux Fd bV ma Fosc Fg Fd d 2x dx m 2 F0 sin wt ) b kx dt dt A general solution to this equation is x(t ) A cos(wt ) Amplitude Frequency forced Phase constant (phase at t=0) Final review 04/14/09 Forced oscillations A general solution to a forced oscillation motion x(t ) A cos(wt ) F0 with A w 2 w0 m ) 2 2 bw m 2 and w0 k m Resonance A No damping b=0 Low damping b Large damping b w0 w In absence of resistive forces, the amplitude of the oscillation is amplified to infinity when the force frequency w approaches the proper frequency w0 Final review 04/14/09 GOOD LUCK With the FINALS ! To contact me: Karine CHESNEL [email protected] Office: N319 ESC 801 – 422 – 5687