1 / 23

Announcements

Announcements. Exam 1/2 today On-line on Moodle Available 11 AM–midnight Contact me if you need accommodations. Influencing Motion. Philosophy, definition, and reality. Objectives. Relate uniform motion and zero net force. Relate force, acceleration, and mass.

lamya
Download Presentation

Announcements

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. Announcements • Exam 1/2 today • On-line on Moodle • Available 11 AM–midnight • Contact me if you need accommodations

  2. Influencing Motion Philosophy, definition, and reality

  3. Objectives • Relate uniform motion and zero net force. • Relate force, acceleration, and mass. • Compute the direction and magnitude of the forces of gravity, support, and friction.

  4. What’s the point? • What governs an object’s motion?

  5. Newton’s First Law • An object’s state of motion does not change unless an outside net force acts upon it. • If at rest, it remains at rest. • If moving, it continues straight at constant speed. Representation of Newton by William Blake, 1795

  6. Does it Make Sense? • Do you feel a force while cruising in a plane? A train? An automobile? • If you were moving in a perfectly straight line at a constant velocity inside a closed box, could you tell?

  7. How Can We Use It? • Equilibrium Rule: An object moving at a constant velocity experiences zero net force. • That means that the forces acting on it add to zero. • A body with zero net force is in mechanical equilibrium.

  8. What does Newton’s first law mean? Being at rest is nothing special; it is just another value (zero) of constant velocity. rest constant velocities

  9. F a= m a=acceleration F=netforce m=mass Newton’s Second Law equivalently, F=ma

  10. Quantify Force • Unit of force: 1 newton (N) = force needed to accelerate 1 kg at 1 m/s2 • Unit named for a person • Unit name lowercase • Abbreviation capitalized

  11. Group Work F = ma.If m = 10 kg and a = 1 m/s2, what is F?

  12. Group Work A net force of 100 N acts on a 10-kg steel block. What is its acceleration?

  13. Working with Commonly-Encountered Forces Gravity Support (Normal force) Friction

  14. Gravity • Magnitude of gravitational force is proportional to mass: F = mg. • (g is gravitational field strength.) • Direction of gravitational force is toward the center of the earth. • At earth’s surface, g  9.8 N/kg.

  15. Group Work • What is the gravitational force, in N, acting on a 2-kg chicken at the surface of the earth? • If gravity is the only force acting on it, what will the chicken’s acceleration be? (Acceleration is a vector, so specify both magnitude—including units— and direction.)

  16. Poll Question Gravity is constantly pulling us downward, but we are not accelerating downward. This means that • Newton’s first law does not apply here. • Gravity does not apply a physical force. • Some other force exactly opposes the force of gravity. • Gravity stops at the earth’s surface.

  17. support weight weight weight Support Force • Exerted by a surface perpendicular (normal) outward • Magnitude as needed to cancel inward forces zero net force

  18. perpendicular (normal) force N F f Friction • Commonplace but complicated • Surface friction acts parallel to a surface • Friction fopposes applied sliding force F

  19. perpendicular (normal) force N F f Friction • f mN(directions of f and N are different) • m = coefficient of friction • Coefficient m depends only on surface materials, not mass, weight, area of contact, sliding speed (one exception).

  20. Friction • Static friction: when the two surfaces are not moving past each other • Kinetic friction: the two surfaces slide along each other • Static friction >kinetic friction

  21. Group Question Rank the magnitude of frictional force on a car in these different situations. • Skidding on dry pavement. • Skidding on ice. • Braking just short of a skid on dry pavement.

  22. Static vs. Kinetic Friction • Start pushing an object • Anti-lock brakes • Learning to drive • Stick-slip motion

  23. Reading for Next Time • Projectiles: falling in gravity • Big ideas: • Vertical acceleration = g downward • Horizontal acceleration = 0 • Horizontal and vertical motion (x, vx, ax; y, vy, ay) are independent

More Related