1 / 19

Introduction to Forces and Newton’s 1 st and 2 nd Laws of Motion

Introduction to Forces and Newton’s 1 st and 2 nd Laws of Motion. Review. How did we previously define the term “force”? Describe the relationship between forces and motion. Types of Forces. There are actually seven types of forces: Applied force Frictional force Gravitational force

wanda
Download Presentation

Introduction to Forces and Newton’s 1 st and 2 nd Laws of Motion

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. Introduction to Forces and Newton’s 1st and 2ndLaws of Motion

  2. Review • How did we previously define the term “force”? • Describe the relationship between forces and motion.

  3. Types of Forces There are actually seven types of forces: • Applied force • Frictional force • Gravitational force • Normal force • Thrust • Drag 7. Lift

  4. Applied Force • Objects are often touching • A push or a pull on anything • Contact force • Example – A person picking up a box applies a force the the box in order to pick it up.

  5. Frictional Force • Works opposite of an object’s motion • Takes away energy • Works to slow down or stop objects • Contact force • Example - As cart moves along the road, friction slows the cart down.

  6. Gravitational Force • Pulls toward the center of the earth • Non-contact force • Relatively constant on Earth, regardless of location and size of the object • Example – A stone thrown in the air will be pulled back down to the Earth’s surface.

  7. Normal Force • Opposes gravity • Contact force • Usually upward • Does not cause acceleration • Usually equal and opposite to the applied force • Example – The book sitting on the table has a normal force holding it up.

  8. Thrust • Rockets, planes, boats • Something pushes backwards causing forward motion • Gas, water, air pushed by engines, propellers, or explosions • Example – An airplanes thrust is provided by its engines.

  9. Drag • Air resistance • Type of friction • Opposes the motion of an object • Moving through water can also cause drag on a boat • Example – As the airplane moves through the air the force of drag pushes back on the airplane.

  10. Lift • Opposes gravity • Lift is usually “upward” • Causes airplanes, hot air balloons to go up but not forward • Example – The force of lift pushes the airplane up and thrust pushes it forward.

  11. Newton’s Laws of Motion • Sir Issac Newton published his three laws of motion in his book Principia in 1687. • Laws describe the effects of forces on the motion of objects.

  12. Newton’s 1st Law of Motion • An object moving at a constant velocity keeps moving at that velocity unless an unbalanced net force acts on it. • An object at rest will stay at rest unless an unbalanced force acts on it. • How do these billiard balls exhibit the 1st law?

  13. Newton’s 1st Law of Motion • This law is also called “the law of inertia”. • Inertia – tendency of an object to resist any change in motion • The greater the mass, the greater the inertia. • Think about a ping pong ball and a bowling ball. Why can’t you use a bowling ball to play ping pong?

  14. Auto Crashes – The Law of Inertia at Work • Passengers not wearing a seat belt keep moving forward at the car’s speed even after the car stops. • Seat belts and air bags save lives because they exert a force on the passenger causing the passengers to slow down.

  15. Newton’s 2nd Law of Motion • Force and motion are connected. • An object will have greater acceleration if a greater force is applied to it. Tossing vs. Throwing

  16. Newton’s 2nd Law of Motion • The mass of the object also affects acceleration. A softball’s mass is about 0.20 kg while a baseball’s mass is about 0.14 kg. If you throw both with the same force, the baseball has greater acceleration because it has less mass.

  17. Using Newton’s 2nd Law • From this information Newton derived the a mathematical equation to summarize the relationship between acceleration, mass, and force. F = ma F = force in Newtons (N) m = mass in kilograms (kg) a = acceleration in meters per second squared (m/s2)

  18. Example Problem #1 • Engineers at the Johnson Space Center must determine the net force needed for a rocket to achieve an acceleration of 70 m/s2. If the mass of the rocket is 45,000 kg, how much net force must the rocket develop?

  19. Example Problem #2 • What is the mass of a truck if it produces a force of 14,000 N while accelerating at a rate of 5 m/s2?

More Related