1 / 25

Physics

Physics. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2vYI2NcVsXY https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HuZZpJJF71U. In Motion. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZo8-ihCA9E. Physics for Science 20F. Distance vs. Displacement. difference between a scalar and a vector.

amccauley
Télécharger la présentation

Physics

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. Physics • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2vYI2NcVsXY • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HuZZpJJF71U

  2. In Motion https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZo8-ihCA9E Physics for Science 20F

  3. Distance vs. Displacement • difference between a scalar and a vector. • A Scalar is a value - has only a number & a unit ex: 25km, 150lbs • A Vector - value that has a number, unit and a direction ex: 30 cm left, 40km north (N)

  4. Distance is how far you’ve traveled in total ex: 25 km • Displacement is how far you are from your starting point. This needs a direction ex: 25 km from home or 40km north of the city • So, distance is a scalar value whereas displacement is a vector.

  5. Displacement with respect to time… • Displacement - always calculated by final position minus initial position.

  6. Positive/negative displacement • A line going up to the right is a positive • A line going down to the right is a negative. Draw it. • A flat line represents no displacement (like you’re standing still). Draw it. • We need to translate a graph to a given situation (or vice versa).

  7. Velocity • Velocity is a vector that relates average displacement to average time. • Speed is the total distance divided by the total time for a trip. • For both, the formula is: v = ∆d ∆t

  8. If you’re finding it from the graph, you are actually finding the slope of the section of line. • If you’re given numbers, simply plug them into the formula. • An easy way to manipulate the formula is to use the magic triangle: d v t

  9. The units for the velocity or speed are just the units for distance slash the units for time. ex:Eiko skates to school, a total distance of 4.5 km. The journey takes her 0.62 hours. What is her average speed? v = d/t v = 4.5 km/0.62 h v = 7.3 km/h

  10. Write down Newton’s 3 laws.

  11. Try these… • Graphing Distance vs Time Worksheet • Graphing Speed vs Time Worksheet

  12. Acceleration • Acceleration - change in velocity per unit of time. • Calculated as the slope of a straight line velocity-time graph • Formula: a = Δv t • Remember that Δv = final velocity – initial velocity!

  13. ex: What’s the average acceleration of a rollercoaster that starts with an initial speed of 5 m/s but whose speed 4 seconds later is 25 m/s? a = vf – vi t = 25 – 5 4 = 20 4 = 5 m/s2 **The units for acceleration are usually m/s2 but watch out for time units that aren’t the same (change km/h to m/s before doing the questions!)**

  14. Try these… • Acceleration Worksheets

  15. Newton’s Three Laws • Newton came up with three laws that are very important for our study of science • His first law was that an object in motion will stay in motion (or an object at rest will stay at rest) until acted upon by a force. • Also called… Law of Inertia ex: A ball will keep rolling but only stops because the force of friction slows it and eventually stops it.

  16. Newton’s second law states that a force ( a push or a pull) that equals an object’s mass times it’s acceleration. • This can be shown by f = ma • The mass must be in kg and acceleration in m/s2. • The units for force are Newtons (N) ex: How much force will a 2 kg mass exert if it accelerates at 4 m/s2? F = ma = (2kg)(4 m/s2) = 8N F m a

  17. Newton’s third law is that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction • This is important in car collisions that we will look at later. • Newton’s three laws video • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mn34mnnDnKU • Bill Nye • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iHeMqK3XZbc

  18. Momentum • Which causes a bigger dent in your car? A cyclist travelling at 50km/h or a tank travelling at 50 km/h? • Which would hurt you more? A bullet travelling at 1 m/s or one travelling at 30m/s? • Momentum depends on 2 factors, mass and velocity and therefore has the formula: p = mv

  19. Mass must be in kg and the velocity is in m/s. • Therefore, the units for momentum is kg m/s • The momentum of an object at rest is always zero • There is a Law of Conservation of Momentumwhich means that the momentum before a collision equals the momentum after the collision

  20. p = mv = (500)(16.67) = 8333.33 kg m/s ex: How much momentum will a 500 kg truck travelling at 16.67m/s have? • If you have to change grams to kg, divide by 1000! p m v

  21. Impulse • Impulse - the impact of a force on a moving object over an interval of time. • Impulse changes the momentum of an object. It can make it larger or smaller. • It is a vector so it has direction • It can be represented by the formula: I = Ft • It will have the units Ns (Newton seconds) I F t

  22. Impulse can be increased in 2 ways: • Increase the force being applied to change the object’s motion • Increase the time that the force is being applied for to change the object’s motion • Which of the two above would be gentler?

  23. Friction • Friction is a resistive force exerted by a surface on a moving object • It is a force that opposes motion • Generally, a rough surface will have greater friction and a smooth surface will have lesser friction. • Friction has a great effect on the braking distances of cars

  24. There are 3 factors that effect the braking distance: 1) the velocity of the vehicle 2) friction (of the surface AND the brakes) 3) reaction time of the driver • The mathematical formula for calculating braking distance on various surfaces is: d = kv2 where d is distance, k is a constant (table), and v is velocity in m/s

  25. There are three situations that you may have to calculate the braking distance: 1) Rubber tires on dry concrete (k = 0.06) 2) Rubber tires on wet concrete (k = 0.1) 3) Rubber tires on ice (k = 0.25) ex: What is the braking distance on dry concrete for a car travelling at 100km/h? 100km/h ÷ 3.6 = 27.8 m/s d = kv2 = (0.06)(27.8)2 = 46.3 m

More Related