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Newton’s Laws - Complex & Powerful

General Physics I: Day 14 Work & Kinetic Energy Exams back Thursday… sorry. Blame viruses (in general). Newton’s Laws - Complex & Powerful. Newton’s work has occupied us for a while Using these we can predict the motion of nearly any object… as long as we know all the forces on it !

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Newton’s Laws - Complex & Powerful

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  1. General Physics I: Day 14Work & Kinetic EnergyExams back Thursday… sorry. Blame viruses (in general).

  2. Newton’s Laws - Complex & Powerful • Newton’s work has occupied us for a while • Using these we can predict the motion of nearly any object… as long as we know all the forces on it! • But reality quickly becomes very hard to handle with Newton’s laws: • Collision of bowling ball & pins • Interactions of atoms in a gas • Etc…

  3. Conservation Laws • Another approach: Look for what is not changing • A quantity that doesn’t change even while interesting things are happening is called a conserved quantity. • At the top of the list is… • The Law of the Conservation of Energy • Energy is never created or destroyed!

  4. Warm-Up: Weight Lifting Work A weight lifter picks up a barbell and 1. lifts it chest high 2. holds it for 30 seconds 3. puts it down. How does the work in each part rank? ~12% →W1 > W3 > W2 ~44% → W1 = W3 > W2 ~31% → W1 > W2 > W3 ~8% → W2 > W1 > W3 ~6% →W3 > W2 > W1  Blending phys/intuition  Yes… if ignoring sign  Correct (including sign)

  5. Work – 1st Try Not the same as the daily definition of “work”. Need a technical definition to define energy later. Work done: Product of the distancemoved times the part of the forceparallel to the motion: Also called the dot product, or scalar product Remember that this translates to But… real forces don’t have steady mag. & dir.

  6. Work – 2nd Try Consider a real force, like a “bench press”. How do we calculate work here? We must account for each little bit of work in which the force is basically constant (could be small). Thanks to calculus, we can: … Better! But this assumes the force is always in the direction of motion.

  7. from HyperPhysics. Work – 3rdTry Need an integral in which both relative direction and magnitude can vary! Any real examples? The math here is a bittougher, but we can writeit easily This won’t be necessary very often, usually direction is fixed and only the strength varies. Photo of shuttle launch (taken by James Prichard for the Palm Beach Post)

  8. Work is a Scalar Work can be positive… If and are somewhat in same direction Indicates transfer of energy TO the object Negative… If and are somewhat in opposite directions Indicates transfer of energy FROM the object Or zero If and are perpendicular, no work is done.

  9. Energy Energy is not easy to define... Energy is the ability to do work. Specifically, the amount of energy an object has is equal to how much work that object could possibly do. Formsof energy: • Kinetic energy (translational & rotational) • Gravitational energy • Elastic energy • Thermal energy (a.k.a. internal energy) • Electromagnetic energy • Chemical energy • Nuclear energy, Rest energy Some energies: “potential energy”, symbol U. Later!

  10. A block is being pulled across a table by a horizontal force, , that is strong enough to cause the block to speed up. Assuming friction is present, rank the work done by each of the four forces on the block as it moves a few cm. Wg = WN > WP > Wf WP > Wf > Wg > WN WP > Wg = WN > Wf WP > Wg > Wf > WN

  11. Worked-Example: Crate Pull How much work does he perform in pulling the crate? Free-Body Diagram of Crate

  12. Worked-Example: Crate Pull

  13. Worked-Example: Crate Pull

  14. Worked-Example: Crate Pull

  15. Kinetic Energy Kinetic energy (and all energy) is a scalar! We can calculate kinetic energy using Kinetic energy is never negative (v2). See the units?[kg·m2/s2] is called a Joule.

  16. Work-Energy Theorem Work is the transfer of energy from one system to another by mechanical forces. Any change in the kinetic energy must be the result of a net force doing work: This connects between the concepts of force and the concepts of energy!

  17. WarmUp: Estimating Work Different cars have different accelerations. A very fast car can go from 0 to 60 mph (26.8 m/s) in under 4 seconds. Go find a 0-60 time. • What car and what is its acceleration (in m/s2)? • Now estimate the amount of work the engine performed on the car as it goes from 0-60. ~83% →Calculated acceleration correctly ~25% →Correctly used to find work ~17% →Correctly used to find work

  18. WarmUp: Estimating Work “a. Bugatti Veyron Super Sport 10.9m/s^2 b.1500 N*M” “a) Bugatti Veyron 16.4 Super Sport goes from 0-60 in 2.4 s. The cars acceleration is (26.8 m/s)/2.4s = 11.67 m/s/s. b)W = (1888kg)(11.67m/s/s)(64.32m) W = 1356037.12 J” “a) 1990 ford mustang gt 166.4m/s^2 b)553839J” “07 Chevy Silverado. 3.67[m.s^2] .5(2540.12kg)(26.8^2) =91.22kJ”

  19. WarmUp: Estimating Work “1990 Dacia 1310 (0 to 100km/hr (27.8m/s) in 15 sec, m=940 kg) a = .54 m/s^2 work = 1/2*940*.54^2 = 137 J” “A.I looked up an Enzo Ferrari which had a 0-60[mph] time of 3.14[s] B. To find the total work I used the work energy theorem equation. knowing the initial velocity is 0 then k1=0 as well. I was left with W=K2=.5*mv^2. Looking up the mass I found the mass of the car is 1255[kg]. Plugging these values in I found the total work to be 450696[J]”

  20. WarmUp: Estimating Work “a) The Tesla Roadster Sport electric car goes 0-60 mph in 3.7 seconds, which gives an acceleration of 7.28 m/s^2 b) If the car's mass is 1225 [kg] and acceleration is 7.28 [m/s^2], then ignoring air resistance and static friction, Force= 7.28 * 1225= 8920 [N]. Displacement= (1/2)(7.28[m/s^2])(3.7 [s])^2= 50 [m]. Work= 8920[N] * 50[m]= 446 [kj]”

  21. Sample Problem The only force on a 2.0 kg canister that is moving on a frictionless table has a magnitude of 5.0 N. The canister initially has a velocity of 4.0 m/s in the positive x direction, and some time later has a velocity of 6.0 m/s in the positive y direction. How much work is done on the canister by the 5.0 N force during this time?

  22. A certain amount of work is required to get a car moving at 10 mph. To then get the car from 10 mph to 20 mph (not from 0 to 20 mph) takes the same amount of work. twice as much work. three times as much work. four times as much work.

  23. Coming up… Thursday (10/9) → 6.4 – 7.1 Warm-Up due Wednesday by 10:00 PM Homework 6 due Sunday by 11:59 PM Exams back on Thursday Come pick up Journal Part II if you don’t have one

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