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Newton’s Third Law

Newton’s Third Law. For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. Newton’s 3 rd Law. For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. Book to earth. Table to book . Think about it . . .

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Newton’s Third Law

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  1. Newton’s Third Law For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.

  2. Newton’s 3rd Law • For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. Book to earth Table to book

  3. Think about it . . . What happens if you are standing on a skateboard or a slippery floor and push against a wall? You slide in the opposite direction (away from the wall), because you pushed on the wall but the wall pushed back on you with equal and opposite force. Why does it hurt so much when you stub your toe? When your toe exerts a force on a rock, the rock exerts an equal force back on your toe. The harder you hit your toe against it, the more force the rock exerts back on your toe (and the more your toe hurts).

  4. Newton’s Third Law • A bug with a mass of 5 grams flies into the windshield of a moving 1000kg bus. • Which will have the most force? • The bug on the bus • The bus on the bug

  5. Newton’s Third Law • The force would be the same. • Force (bug)= m x A • Force (bus)= M x a Think I look bad? You should see the other guy!

  6. Action and Reaction on Different Masses Consider you and the earth Action: earth pulls on you Reaction: you pull on earth

  7. Action: tire pushes on road Reaction: road pushes on tire

  8. Reaction: gases push on rocket Action: rocket pushes on gases

  9. Consider hitting a baseball with a bat. If we call the force applied to the ball by the bat the action force, identify the reaction force. (a) the force applied to the bat by the hands (b) the force applied to the bat by the ball (c) the force the ball carries with it in flight (d) the centrifugal force in the swing

  10. A carpenter hits a nail with a hammer. Compared to the magnitude of the force the hammer exerts on the nail, the magnitude of the force the nail exerts on the hammer during contact is (A) less (B) greater (C) the same

  11. If a 65-kg astronaut exerts a force with a magnitude of 50 N on a satellite that she is repairing, the magnitude of the force that the satellite exerts on her is (A) 0 N (B) 50 N less than her weight (C) 50 N more than her weight (D) 50 N

  12. A high school physics student is sitting in a seat reading this question. The magnitude of the force with which the seat is pushing up on the student to support him is closest to (A) 0N (B) 60 N (C) 600N (D) 6,000 N

  13. Inertia

  14. Which object has the most inertia? (A) a 0.001-kilogram bumblebee traveling at 2 meters per second (B) a 0.1-kilogram baseball traveling at 20 meters per second (C) a 5-kilogram bowling ball traveling at 3 meters per second (D) a 10-kilogram sled at rest

  15. A lab cart is loaded with different masses and moved at various velocities. Which diagram shows the cart-mass system with the greatest inertia?

  16. A 10-kilogram block is at rest on a plane inclined at 15° to the horizontal. As the angle of the incline is increased to 30°, the mass of the block will (A) decrease (B) increase (C) remain the same

  17. Which object has the greatest inertia? (A) a 5.00-kg mass moving at 10.0 m/s (B) a 10.0-kg mass moving at 1.00 m/s (C) a 15.0-kg mass moving at 10.0 m/s (D) a 20.0-kg mass moving at 1.00 m/s

  18. A 0.50-kilogram cart is rolling at a speed of 0.40 meter per second. If the speed of the cart is doubled, the inertia of the cart is (A) halved (B) doubled (C) quadrupled (D) unchanged

  19. Which object has the greatest inertia? (A) A (B) B (C) C (D) D

  20. Net Force

  21. The vector diagram represents two forces, F1 and F2, simultaneously acting on an object. Which vector best represents the resultant of the two forces?

  22. The diagram above represents a 5.0-N force and a 12-N force acting on point P. The resultant of the two forces has a magnitude of (A) 5.0-N (B) 7.0-N (C) 12-N (D) 13-N

  23. The diagram above shows a 5.00-kilogram block at rest on a horizontal, frictionless table Which diagram best represents the force exerted on the block by the table?

  24. Which diagram represents a box in equilibrium?

  25. A 20-N force due north and a 20-N force due east act concurrently on an object. The additional force necessary to bring the object into a state of equilibrium is (A) 20 N, northeast (B) 20 N, southwest (C) 28 N, northeast (D) 28 N, southwest

  26. A box is pushed toward the right across a classroom floor. The force of friction on the box is directed toward the (A) left (B) right (C) ceiling (D) floor

  27. The diagram represents two concurrent forces. Which vector represents the force that will produce equilibrium with these two forces?

  28. A sled and rider slide down a snow-covered hill that makes an angle of 30° with the horizontal. Which vector best represents the direction of the normal force, FN, exerted by the hill on the sled?

  29. Which body is in equilibrium? (A) a satellite orbiting Earth in a circular orbit (B) a ball falling freely toward the surface of Earth (C) a car moving with a constant speed along a straight, level road (D) a projectile at the highest point in its trajectory

  30. Spring Scale

  31. A person is standing on a bathroom scale in an elevator car. If the scale reads a value greater than the weight of the person at rest, the elevator car could be moving (A) downward at constant speed (B) upward at constant speed (C) downward at increasing speed (D) upward at increasing speed

  32. The spring in a scale in the produce department of a supermarket stretches 0.025 meter when a watermelon weighing 1.0 × 102 Newtons is placed on the scale. The spring constant for this spring is (A) 3.2 × 105 N/m (B) 2.5 N/m (C) 4.0 × 103 N/m (D) 3.1 × 10–2 N/m

  33. An unstretched spring has a length of 10. centimeters. When the spring is stretched by a force of 16 Newtons, its length is increased to 18 centimeters. What is the spring constant of this spring? (A) 0.89 N/cm (B) 2.0 N/cm (C) 1.6 N/cm (D) 1.8 N/cm

  34. A spring hanging vertically that stretches 0.075 meter when a 5.0-Newton block is attached. The value of the spring constant is (A) 38 N/m (B) 67 N/m (C) 130 N/m (D) 650 N/m

  35. F=ma

  36. The magnitude of the acceleration of block B is (A) 6.0 m/s2 (B) 2.0 m/s2 (C) 3.0 m/s2 (D) 4.0 m/s2

  37. What is the weight of a 2.00-kilogram object on the surface of Earth? (A) 4.91 N (B) 2.00 N (C) 9.81 N (D) 19.6 N

  38. Two forces, F1 and F2, are applied to a block on a frictionless, horizontal surface. If the magnitude of the block’s acceleration is 2.0 m/s2, what is the mass of the block? (A) 1kg (B) 5kg (C) 6kg (D) 7kg

  39. A person weighing 785 Newtons on the surface of Earth would weigh 298 Newtons on the surface of Mars. What is the magnitude of the gravitational field strength on the surface of Mars? (A) 2.63 N/kg (B) 3.72 N/kg (C) 6.09 N/kg (D) 9.81 N/kg

  40. A 25-N horizontal force northward and a 35-N horizontal force southward act concurrently on a 15-kg object on a frictionless surface. What is the magnitude of the object’s acceleration? (A) 0.67 m/s2 (B) 1.7 m/s2 (C) 2.3 m/s2 (D) 4.0 m/s2

  41. A 60-kg physics student would weigh 1560 N on the surface of planet X. What is the magnitude of the acceleration due to gravity on the surface of planet X? (A) 0.038 m/s2 (B) 6.1 m/s2 (C) 9.8 m/s2 (D) 26 m/s2

  42. Dr. E has a mass of 88 kg. What is his weight (Newtons)? • When he jumped out of the airplane what was his initial acceleration (m/s2)? • After several seconds, the force of air resistance was 400-N up. What was his downward force (Newtons)? • What is his current acceleration (m/s2)?

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