1 / 83

Chapter 4

Chapter 4. The Laws of Motion. Force. Force is associated with the change in the stat of motion of an object. Force is required to make an object move from stationay. What is the relation between the force on an object and the change in motion of that object?. 4.1 Classes of Forces.

Download Presentation

Chapter 4

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 4 The Laws of Motion

  2. Force Force is associated with the change in the stat of motion of an object. Force is required to make an object move from stationay. What is the relation between the force on an object and the change in motion of that object?

  3. 4.1 Classes of Forces • Contact forces involve physical contact between two objects • Field forces act through empty space • No physical contact is required

  4. Magnitudes of Forces • A spring can be used to calibrate the magnitude of a force

  5. Forces are vectors • Forces are vectors, so you must use the rules for vector addition to find the net force acting on an object

  6. Fundamental Forces • All particles in nature are subject to four fundamental forces • Strong force • Electromagnetic force • Weak force • Gravitational force • This list is in order of decreasing strength

  7. Nature of the four fundamental forces • Gravitational forces between objects with masses • Electromagnetic forces between electric charges • Strong nuclear forces between subatomic particles • Weak nuclear forces for certain radioactive decay processes

  8. Nuclear Force • Holds nucleons together • Strongest of all fundamental forces • Very short-ranged • Less than 10-15 m (1fm) • Negligible for separations greater than this

  9. 31.1 Atoms as Elementary Particles • Atoms • From the Greek for “indivisible” • Were once thought to be the elementary particles • Atom constituents • Proton, neutron, and electron • After 1932 (neutrons are found in this year) these were viewed as elementary for they are very stable • All matter was made up of these particles

  10. Discovery of New Particles • New particles • Beginning in 1945, many new particles were discovered in experiments involving high-energy collisions • Characteristically unstable with short lifetimes ( from 10-6s to 10-23s) • Over 300 have been cataloged and form a particle zoo • A pattern was needed to understand all these new particles

  11. Elementary Particles – Quarks • Now, physicists recognize that most particles are made up of quarks • Exceptions include photons, electrons and a few others • The quark model has reduced the array of particles to a manageable few • Protons and neutrons are not truly elementary, but are systems of tightly bound quarks

  12. Electromagnetic Force • Responsible for binding atoms and molecules together to form matter • About 10-2 times the strength of the nuclear force • A long-range force that decreases in strength as the inverse square of the separation between interacting particles

  13. Weak Force • To account for the radioactive decay process such as beta decay in certain nuclei • Its strength is about 10-5 times that of the strong force • Short-range force • Scientists now believe the weak and electromagnetic forces are two manifestions of a single interaction, the electroweak force

  14. Gravitational Force • A familiar force that holds the planets, stars and galaxies together • A long-range force • It is about 10-41 times the strength of the nuclear force • Weakest of the four fundamental forces • Its effect on elementary particles is negligible

  15. Explanation of Forces • Forces between particles are often described in terms of the exchange of field particles or quanta • The force is mediated by the field particles • Photons for the electromagnetic force • Gluons for the nuclear force • W+, W- and Z particles for the weak force • Gravitons for the gravitational force

  16. Forces and Mediating Particles

  17. Force and Motions:Isaac Newton (1642-1727) Three Newton’s laws of motion

  18. 4.2 Newton’s First Law: The Law of Inertia • A moving object can be observed from a number of reference frame. • Observers in different reference frames may describe the motion of the object differently. • If an object does not interact with other objects, it is possible to identify a reference frame in which the object has zero acceleration • Such a reference frame is also called an inertial frame of reference

  19. Inertial Frames • Any reference frame that moves with constant velocity relative to an inertial frame is itself an inertial frame • A reference frame that moves with constant velocity relative to the distant stars is the best approximation of an inertial frame • We can consider the Earth to be such an inertial frame although it has a small centripetal acceleration associated with its motion

  20. Newton’s First Law – Alternative Statement • In the absence of external forces, when viewed from an inertial reference frame, an object at rest remains at rest and an object in motion continues in motion with a constant velocity • Newton’s First Law describes what happens in the absence of a force • When no force acts on an object, the acceleration of the object is zero

  21. 4.3 Inertia and Mass • The tendency of an object to resist any attempt to change its velocity is called inertia • Mass is the property of an object that specifies how much resistance an object exhibits to change in its velocity

  22. More About Mass • An inherent property of an object • Independent of the object’s surroundings • Independent of the method used to measure it • Mass is a scalar quantity • The SI unit of mass is kg

  23. Mass vs. Weight • Mass and weight are two different quantities • Weight is equal to the magnitude of the gravitational force exerted on the object • The weight of an object will vary with location • The mass of an object is the same everywhere

  24. 4.4 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 • Force is the cause of change in motion, as measured by the acceleration • Algebraically,

  25. More About Newton’s Second Law • is the net force • This is the vector sum of all the forces acting on the object • Newton’s Second Law can be expressed in terms of components: • SFx= m ax • SFy = m ay • SFz = m az

  26. Units of Force

  27. Fig 4.4

  28. 4.5 Gravitational Force • The gravitational force, , is the force that the earth exerts on an object • This force is directed toward the center of the earth • Its magnitude is called the weight of the object • Weight = Fg = mg

  29. More About Weight • Because it is dependent on g, the weight varies with location • g, and therefore the weight, is less at higher altitudes • We can compare the masses of two objects by measuring their weights. At a given location, the ratio of the weights of two objects equals the ratio of their masses.

  30. Gravitational Mass vs. Inertial Mass • In Newton’s first Law, the mass is the inertial mass and measures the resistance to a change in the object’s motion • In the gravitational force Fg=mg, the mass is determined by the gravitational attraction between the object and the Earth. • The mass of an object obtained in this way is called the gravitational mass. • Experiments show that gravitational mass and inertial mass have the same value

  31. 4.6 Newton’s Third Law • 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 • Note on notation: is the force exerted by A on B

  32. Action-Reaction Examples, 1 • The force exerted by object 1 on object 2 is equal in magnitude and opposite in direction to exerted by object 2 on object 1 Fig 4.5

  33. Fig 4.5

  34. Newton’s Third Law, Alternative Statements • Forces always occur in pairs • A single isolated force cannot exist • The action force is equal in magnitude to the reaction force but opposite in direction • One of the forces is the action force, the other is the reaction force • It doesn’t matter which is considered the action and which the reaction • The action and reaction forces must act on different objects and be of the same type

  35. Action-Reaction Examples, 2 • The action force (table on monitor) is the reaction of the force that the monitor exerts on the table • Normal means perpendicular, in this case • The action (Earth on monitor) force is equal in magnitude and opposite in direction to the reaction force (the monitor exerts on the Earth) Fig 4.6(a)

  36. Normal force • The normal force is a contact force that is perpendicular to the contact surface.

  37. Free Body Diagram • In a free body diagram, you want the forces acting on a particular object • The normal force and the force of gravity are the forces that act on the monitor • The normal force balances the gravitational force. Fig 4.6(b)

  38. Fig 4.7

  39. 4.7 Applications of Newton’s Law • Objects in equilibrium • If the acceleration of an object is zero, the object is said to be in equilibrium • Mathematically, the net force acting on the object is zero

  40. Fig 4.9

  41. Problem-Solving Hints Newton’s Laws • Conceptualize the problem – draw a diagram • Categorize the problem • Equilibrium (SF = 0) or Newton’s Second Law (SF = m a) • Analyze • Draw free-body diagrams for each object • Include only forces acting on the object

  42. Equilibrium, Example 2a • Example 4.2 • Conceptualize the traffic light • Categorize as an equilibrium problem • No movement, so acceleration is zero Fig 4.10(a)

  43. Equilibrium, Example 2b • Analyze • Need two free-body diagrams • Apply equilibrium equation to the light and find • Apply equilibrium equations to the knot and find and Fig 4.10(b)(c)

More Related