1 / 33

Study Guide for Force And Motion Unit Test

Study Guide for Force And Motion Unit Test. Chapter 1 Section 1. Motion- the state in which the distance between two objects is changing Reference point- a place or object used for comparison to determine if something is in motion.

ginger
Télécharger la présentation

Study Guide for Force And Motion Unit Test

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. Study Guide for Force And Motion Unit Test

  2. Chapter 1 Section 1 • Motion- the state in which the distance between two objects is changing • Reference point- a place or object used for comparison to determine if something is in motion. • Speed – the distance an object travels in one unit of time ( S= D/T) • Average speed- Total distance divided by total time • Velocity-Speed in a given direction (4 m/s EAST)

  3. Using the Speed Formula How long does it take a bird to fly 300km if it travels at a speed of 50 km/hr? T= D/S = 300 km/50 km/hr = 6 hr Jimmy can pitch a baseball a distance of 48 meters in 1.5 seconds. How fast is his pitch? S= D/T = 48 m/1.5 s = 32 m/s

  4. Graphing Speed • The following is a data table showing the distance a jet travels in a certain amount of time from Denver to Phoenix. Be able create a graph from a data table.

  5. Graphing Speed

  6. Be able to analyze a graph…

  7. ????

  8. Chapter 1 Section 3 • Acceleration- the rate at which velocity changes • Acceleration= final velocity- initial velocity ÷ time • Units… m/s²

  9. A skydiver accelerates from 20 m/s to 40 m/s in two seconds. What is the skydiver’s acceleration? • A= f.v.-i.v./time= 40-20/2 = 20/2= 10 m/s²

  10. Three ways an object can accelerate…

  11. Graphing Acceleration (note- y-axis)

  12. Differences between speed and acceleration graphs… • What is on the y-axis • Horizontal line means something different

  13. Chapter 2 Section 1 • Force- a push or a pull • Balanced force- equal forces acting on one object in opposite directions/ doesn’t change the object’s motion • Unbalanced force- can cause an object to start moving, stop moving or change direction/ changes an object’s motion • Net force- the overall force on an object after all the forces are added together • Mass- amount of matter in an object • Inertia- when an object tries to resist its change in motion

  14. Newton’s First Law • An object at rest stays at rest. • An object in motion will remain in motion unless acted upon by an unbalanced force. • A ball won’t start to move unless it is kicked or thrown. • That ball won’t move through the air forever. Air resistance, friction from the ground, a person’s hand are all unbalanced forces.

  15. Chapter 2 Section 2 • Newton’s Second Law • Force = Mass x Acceleration • Mass units– kg • Acceleration units – m/s² • Force units- Newtons

  16. W = m x gravity constant • Find the weight of a 30 kg object on the earth.  •  W   =  m x g •   W  =  30 kg x 9.8 m/sec2 • Weight on the earth  = 294 Newtons

  17. Chapter 2 Section 3 Friction • Friction is a force that one surface exerts on another when two objects rub against each other • Examples– Skateboarder puts his/her foot down on the ground to slow down -- A baseball player slides into home base

  18. The factors that determine how much friction there will be between two objects are… • The types of surfaces involved • How hard those surfaces push together.

  19. Friction opposes motion

  20. Examples of friction

  21. Friction examples… • Friction is reduced when… Speed skater/luge moves across the ice smoothly Adding oil to hinges • Friction is increased when… A car has new tires A boot has thick treads

  22. Air Resistance • A type of fluid friction that occurs when objects fall through the air • This slows down the speed of objects falling. It opposes motion so goes in the opposite direction of gravity and motion.

  23. Gravity • Gravity is a force that pulls objects towards Earth. • Free fall occurs when it is the only force acting on a falling object. • Terminal velocity is the greatest velocity an object reaches.

  24. How does weight relate to Newton’s second law? • Weight is defined as the force of gravity on a person or object. • You can rewrite Newton’s Second Law of motion (Force = mass x acceleration) as… • Weight = mass x gravity (9.8 m/s²)

  25. Strength of Gravity • The two factors that determine the strength of gravity between two objects are… • Mass • Distance

  26. Law of Universal Gravitation • The force of gravity acts between all objects in the universe.

  27. Strength of Gravity…

  28. Chapter 2, Section 3 • Newton’s Third Law states that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. • Momentum is defined as an object’s mass times its velocity (Momentum = mass x velocity). • The units for momentum is kgxm/s

  29. Law of Conservation of Momentum • The total momentum of two or more objects that interact don’t change. • It is the same before and after an event. (train cars) • The total momentum of any group of objects remains the same unless outside forces act on the objects (friction)

  30. Law of Conservation of Momentum

  31. How is momentum conserved? • http://youtu.be/y2Gb4NIv0Xg

  32. Chapter 2 Section 5 • Centripetal force causes an object to move in a circle

More Related