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1.2 Falling Balls

ball. 1.2 Falling Balls. Ideas for today:. Weight Acceleration due to gravity Falling objects Horizontal and vertical motion. Recap. The force exerted on an object is equal to the product of that object’s mass times its acceleration .

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1.2 Falling Balls

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  1. ball 1.2 Falling Balls

  2. Ideas for today: • Weight • Acceleration due to gravity • Falling objects • Horizontal and vertical motion

  3. Recap The force exerted on an object is equal to the product of that object’s mass times its acceleration. The acceleration is in the same direction as the force. Force = mass x acceleration F = m a (force and acceleration are vectors)

  4. Recap, continued a = F / m Mass is a measure of inertia Animation (link): simulation of 1-d forces Courtesy of: Physics Education Technology (Carl Wieman’s project at CU)

  5. Clicker Question: Suppose that I throw a ball upward into the air. Right after the ball leaves my hand, is there any force pushing the ball upward? (A) Yes (B) No

  6. Galileo was the first to analyze motion in terms of measurements and mathematics. He described acceleration, which is the rate of change of speed:(should be velocity…) Galileo, age 60, drawn by Ottavio Leoni in 1624. final speed – initial speed time required acceleration =

  7. Galileo’s Inclined Plane Important! • Galileo did not use vectors • Really: final velocity – initial velocity time required acceleration =

  8. Galileo did experiments to convince others that the acceleration caused by gravity would be the same for all freely falling objects if there was no air to retard their motion. He dropped two heavy metal balls together from the leaning tower. Although one weighed much more than the other, they reached the ground almost at the same time. 1. Experiment repeated MANY times 2. Led by a thought experiment (brick that splits in two) Important forScientific Method:

  9. The nature of science*: • Physics is about predicting the future • There is always a limit to accuracy • Verified by experiment • Experiments must be reproducible • Scientific knowledge is constantly evolving, and is always a little wrong (but can still predict well enough) *according to me

  10. Large and Small Balls A tennis ball and a golf ball dropped side-by-side in air. The tennis ball is affected more by the air’s resistance than the golf ball. The larger the object is, and the faster it is falling, the greater the air’s resistance to its motion, as skydivers all know…

  11. Coin and Feather When most of the air is removed from a container, feathers and apples fall almost side-by-side, their speeds changing at almost the same rate. If all the air was removed, they would accelerate downward at exactly the same rate.

  12. Observations About Falling Balls • A dropped ball: • Begins a rest, but soon acquires downward speed • Covers more and more distance each second • A tossed ball: • Rises to a certain height • Comes briefly to a stop • Begins to descend, much like a dropped ball

  13. Repeat Galileo’s Inclined Plane Dropped Ball: Falling Downward velocity = initial velocity + acceleration × time position=initial position + initial velocity × time + ½ acceleration × time2

  14. How do position, velocity, and acceleration relate? • Acceleration tells Velocity how to change • Velocity tells Position how to change • Time is a marker common to all three

  15. In free fall objects accelerate constantly toward Earth at the rate of g . Objects moving upward slow down until their direction is reversed, and then they accelerate downward. At the top of their path the upward speed is zero. How long? Only instantaneously.A constant acceleration means the speed is changing all the time, so the speed only passes through the value of zero at the top of the path.

  16. Tossed Ball: Falling Upward

  17. Clicker Question • Is it possible to have an object that has • a negative position, a positive velocity, • and a negative acceleration all at the • same time? • A) Yes • B) No

  18. Drop and Shoot Sideways Demo Tossed ball: Falling Upward, then Downward, with a constant horizontal velocity component

  19. Here two heavy balls begin “free fall” at the same time. The red one is dropped, so it moves straight downward. The yellow ball is given some speed in the horizontal direction as it is released.

  20. The horizontal lines show that they keep pace with each other in the vertical direction. Why? They have the same acceleration, g, downward, and they both started with zero speed in the downward direction.

  21. Repeat Galileo’s Inclined Plane The yellow ball’s horizontal speed is not affected by gravity, which acts only in the vertical direction.

  22. Cannonballs shot horizontally with different speeds from the ship travel different distances. But each cannonball drops the same distance in the same amount of time, since the vertical acceleration is the same for each.

  23. A simulated strobe illustration of a plane flying horizontally with constant speed dropping a cannonball package of food and medical supplies, ignoring air resistance.

  24. The cannonball package of food and medical suppliesinitially has the same horizontal speed of the airplane. Neglecting air resistance, it keeps that horizontal speed as it falls, so it stays beneath the airplane.

  25. Shoot the Monkey Another example of “packages of food and medical supplies” being dropped by a WWII food delivery system  Note the streamlined packages. Allowances are made for air drag. Note also the acceleration.

  26. Weight is a type of force It is the earth’s gravitational force on an object

  27. Weight and Mass • An object’s weight is proportional to its mass weight = g · mass • On the Earth’s surface, that constant, g, is 9.8 Newtons/kilogram = 9.8 meters/second2 (9.8 is approximately 10) 32 feet/second2 • g is called the acceleration due to gravity • 1 Newton  1 kilogram·meter/second2 • A Newton is a unit of force, like pounds. A Newton is about ¼ pound, about the weight of a medium apple

  28. Acceleration Due to Gravity On Earth’s surface, all falling objects accelerate downward at the acceleration due to gravity, g ! • force = mass x acceleration, or F=ma (Newton’s 2nd law) • weight = m g = force m g = m a g = a Don’t think that this is quite so simple…

  29. m g = m a Why should gravitational and inertial masses be the same? Einstein’s equivalence principle – still being tested! U. Washington

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