1 / 16

PHSX 114, Monday, September 8, 2003

PHSX 114, Monday, September 8, 2003. Reading for this lecture: Chapter 4 (4-1 -- 4-4) Reading for Wednesday's lecture: Chapter 4 (4-5 -- 4-6) Homework for today's lecture: Chapter 4, questions 3, 5; problems 1, 65, 66. Exam results. How to find your exam score off the web.

frieda
Download Presentation

PHSX 114, Monday, September 8, 2003

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. PHSX 114, Monday, September 8, 2003 • Reading for this lecture: Chapter 4 (4-1 -- 4-4) • Reading for Wednesday's lecture: Chapter 4 (4-5 -- 4-6) • Homework for today's lecture: Chapter 4, questions 3, 5; problems 1, 65, 66

  2. Exam results • How to find your exam score off the web

  3. Dynamics -- the causes of motion • New terms: force, mass

  4. Aristotle's view of motion (accepted for 2000 years) • The natural state of an object is to be at rest. A force is required to make an object move. • Seems like common sense, matches our experiences

  5. Galileo (1564-1642) had a radical new view • Galileo imagines a world without friction • Natural state is constant velocity (motion in a straight line with constant speed) • Air track demo

  6. Newton's first law of motion • Borrows from Galileo • A body in motion (at rest) remains in motion (at rest) with constant velocity unless acted upon by a net external force. • Law of inertia

  7. Net external force • Symbol = ΣF • A vector sum • An object at rest can have forces acting upon it • Notebook on table has two forces acting upon it

  8. What happens when the net external force is not zero? • Answer: The object accelerates

  9. Newton's second law of motion • ΣF=ma • m is the mass • mass is the resistance of the body to being accelerated (inertial mass) • First two laws define force and mass

  10. Your turn • You observe an object at rest. Are there any forces acting upon it? • Answer: We know the net external force must be zero, but there could be forces acting upon it. • You observe an object moving with a constant velocity. Are there any forces acting upon it? • Answer: We know the net external force must be zero, but there could be forces acting upon it.

  11. Your turn • You observe an object accelerating. Are there any forces acting upon it? • Answer: We know the net external force cannot be zero. There must be at least one force acting upon it.

  12. Units of force and mass • SI units: mass in kilograms, force in Newtons • 1 N = 1 kg-m/s2 • In English units, a pound is a unit of force • Know what the English mass unit is? • The slug. 1 pound = 1 slug-ft/s2

  13. Mass is a scalar, force is a vector • Newton's second law is a vector equation • ΣFx=max, ΣFy=may, ΣFz=maz, • Example

  14. Your turn An object has mass 2 kg and two forces act upon it. F1= 3 N in the +x direction, F2= 4 N in the +y direction. Find the magnitude and direction of the acceleration vector. Answer: 2.5 m/s2 , 53.1 degrees from the x direction ax=( F1x+ F2x)/m=(3 + 0)/2 = 1.5 m/s2 , ay=( F1y+ F2y)/m=(0 + 4)/2 = 2 m/s2

  15. An object accelerates if some other object in the environment produces a force on it • Two basic types of force • 1. contact force • 2. action-at-a distance force • All the basic forces are of the second type

  16. Still to come: • Newton's 3rd (and final) law of motion • Discussing specific forces and their properties • Solving problems using Newton's laws

More Related