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GPS: Measure and calculate frictional forces and Newton’s three laws of motion

GPS: Measure and calculate frictional forces and Newton’s three laws of motion. EQ: What is the difference between contact forces and field forces?. Force : Any push or pull Unit of force is a Newton (N) Is a vector quantity Symbolized using arrows

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GPS: Measure and calculate frictional forces and Newton’s three laws of motion

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  1. GPS: Measure and calculate frictional forces and Newton’s three laws of motion EQ: What is the difference between contact forces and field forces?

  2. Force: Any push or pull • Unit of force is a Newton (N) • Is a vector quantity • Symbolized using arrows • Arrows denote direction and magnitude (size) • Multiple forces act on objects • Newton’s laws deal with net force – the leftover force after all forces have acted on an object

  3. Categorizing Forces • Contact forces – object from the external world applies a force to a system by touching it • Examples: • Friction • Normal force • Tension

  4. Categorizing Forces • Field force – object from external world applies a force to a system WITHOUT touching it • Example: • Gravitational force (weight) • Electromagnetic force

  5. Free body diagrams • Forces result from interactions between masses • Mass which causes the force is the “agent” • The object acted on by the force is the “system” • Example: falling book • Book’s mass is system • Earth’s mass is agent

  6. Free Body Diagrams • Free body diagrams allow analysis of how forces affect motion • ID system – draw as circle – or particle (dot) • ID agents – draw as vectors (arrows) • ID everywhere system touches external world – contact forces • ID field forces • Make vectors proportional in size • Draw force vectors away from system (circle) • Choose positive direction – usually in direction of greatest force.

  7. Forces as Vectors • Determining net force • Forces in same direction – add • Forces in opposite direction – subtract • Total is called net force • Object moves in direction of largest force

  8. 10N 10N 10m/s 10m/s 10N 10N 10N 10N Forces as Vectors • Net Force up and down = 0N • Net Force left and right = 20N to right • Object will increase velocity and will move to the right – positive acceleration 10N • Net Force up and down = 0N • Net Force right and left = 0N • Object will maintain velocity 10N

  9. 10N 10N 10N 10N Forces as Vectors • Balanced forces = 0 net force • Equal in size and opposite in direction • Result in no change in velocity – no acceleration

  10. Forces as Vectors • Forces that act in opposite directions act against each other • Magnitudes are subtracted • Motion is in the direction of greatest force 20N 30N • Net force is 10 N • Object will move to the right 20N 30N • Net force is 10 N • Object will move to the left

  11. Forces as Vectors • Forces in same direction work together to affect motion • Magnitudes are added 20N 30N 5N 5N • Net Force acting on object = 50N • Object will move to right • Net Force acting on the object is 10N • Object will move downward

  12. On p. 89 in text: Complete 1-5 Practice gets you closer to perfect

  13. GPS: Measure and calculate frictional forces and Newton’s three laws of motion EQ: How do net forces affect acceleration?

  14. Newton’s 1st Law: Law of Inertia • Objects with no net force acting on them will not change their motion • Objects at rest will stay at rest • Objects in motion will maintain that motion – no acceleration will occur • Forces are in equilibrium • Resistance to change in motion is due to inertia

  15. Newton’s 1st Law: Law of Inertia • Equilibrium: Objects at rest • Net force on object = 0N • Objects sitting on a surface • WEIGHT pushes downward FORCE • NORMAL force pushes upward • A contact force applied by a surface • Total normal is equal andopposite of weight • Hanging objects • Weight pulls down • Tensionpulls upward • A contact force applied by a rope/string/cable • Total tension is equal and opposite of weight

  16. An object at rest on a surface w = weight n = normal force An object at rest hanging from a surface t = tension t =5N t =5N w = 1N n = 1N w =10N

  17. Newton’s 1st Law: Law of Inertia • Mass is NOT volume • Volume is the amount of space an object occupies • Which has more mass, a pillow or a car battery? • Car battery • Which has more volume? • Pillow • Which has more inertia?

  18. Newton’s 1st Law: Law of Inertia • Mass is NOT weight • Weight is a measure of the force of gravity on an object • Weight can change with gravity, mass doesn’t • Weight is a force – units are Newtons • The more mass, the more weight – b/c more material for gravity to act on

  19. Dynamic Equilibrium • Zero net force • Nonzero constant velocity – NOT AT REST • Which property allows objects to keep moving at constant velocity? • INERTIA • Which force acts against dynamic equilibrium? • FRICTION • Friction only comes into play when there is motion between two surfaces

  20. GPS: Measure and calculate frictional forces and Newton’s three laws of motion EQ: What is the relationship between mass, force and acceleration?

  21. Newton’s 1st Law: Law of Inertia • Inertia is measured as mass • Mass is the amount of material in an object • More mass, more inertia, more resistance to change • More massive objects are harder to get moving and harder to stop

  22. Friction: A force between two surfaces that ALWAYS OPPOSES motion • Has to be acted against to get things moving • Has to be reduced to keep things moving • Is always between two surfaces and always makes a moving object slow down • Friction converts moving energy to heat • Causes surfaces to heat up • Causes surfaces to wear down

  23. Newton’s 2nd Law • Changing Velocity – • Net force acting on a body causes acceleration • If velocity changes, there’s a net force acting on it • Any change in speed or direction aka ACCELERATION

  24. Newton’s 2nd Law • The net force (Fnet) causing acceleration can be calculated: • Net Force = (mass) acceleration • Fnet = ma or a = Fnet or m = Fnet m a

  25. Newton’s 2nd Law • Fnet = ma • 1kg ball to accelerate 10m/s2 requires 10N of net force • m = 1kg a = 10m/s2 Fnet = ? Fnet =ma • Fnet = 1kg(10m/s2) Fnet = 10kg٠m/s2 • 1kg ٠m/s2= 1N = unit of force

  26. Increasing mass requires a greater net force to get the same acceleration • m = 1kg a = 10m/s2 Fnet = 10N • m = 2kg a = 10m/s2 Fnet = 20 N • Mass doubled, net force needed doubled • INERTIA doubled – more resistance • Semi-Truck has much bigger engine than mini-cooper – bigger engine, more Force

  27. Increasing acceleration requires a greater net force • m = 1kg a = 10m/s2 Fnet = 10N • m = 1kg a = 20m/s2 Fnet = 20 N • Acceleration doubled, net force needed doubled Mustang vs Mustang GT : Same mass • GT accelerates faster – bigger engine (V-8) – more force

  28. Maintaining net force on a greater mass will result in LESS acceleration • a = Fnet/m • m = 1kg Fnet = 10N a = 10N/1kg = 10m/s2 • m = 2kg Fnet = 10 N a = 10N/2kg = 5m/s2 • Mass was doubled, acceleration cut in ½ • Mass cut in ½, acceleration doubled

  29. There is an inverse relationship between “m” and “a” • IF Fnetis not changed, ↑mass causes ↓acceleration • IF Fnetis not changed, ↓mass causes ↑ acceleration • Camaro (↓m) accelerates faster than Cadillac SUV (↑m) with same 3.6L engine size (same Fnet)

  30. 2010 Chevrolet Camaro Performance SpecsMass is about 1542kg Engine: 3.6L V6Power:300 HP SAE @ 6,400 rpmTorque:273 ft. per lb. @ 5,200 rpm 2009 Cadillac SRX Performance SpecsMass is about 2028kg Engine: 3.6L V6Power:255 HP SAE @ 6,500 rpmTorque:254 ft. per lb. @ 2,800 rpm

  31. WEIGHT = Fw= m(“a” due to gravity) • On Earth “a” due to gravity = g = 10m/s2 Fw = mg • If a 1kg ball hangs from a spring scale. What is its weight? • m = 1kg g = 10m/s2 Fw = ? Fw= mg • Fw= 1kg(10m/s2) Fw= 10N

  32. GPS: Measure and calculate frictional forces and Newton’s three laws of motion EQ: How can Force,mass, and acceleration be derived using Newton’s 2nd Law ?

  33. Practice • Calculate the acceleration of a 2000kg airplane just before takeoff when it’s thrust is 500N.

  34. Practice • Calculate the acceleration of a 300,000kg jumbo jet just before takeoff when the thrust of each of its 4 engines is 30,000N

  35. Practice • Calculate the horizontal force that must be applied to produce an acceleration of 1g for a 1.3kg puck on a horizontal friction free table.

  36. Practice A 10kg screen hangs from the ceiling on two wires. What is its weight? What is the tension force on each wire?

  37. Falling with AIR RESISTANCE (friction) • Air resistance increases with speed • Air resistance increases with greater surface area • Increased air resistance means increased friction --- opposes motion

  38. Terminal Velocity • Air resistance ↑ = weight ↓ • 0 net force – falling body reaches constant velocity • 0 acceleration • Why does body keep falling down? INERTIA! -- resists change in motion

  39. Newton’s 3rd Law • Newton’s 3rd Law • When one object exerts a force on another, the second object exerts a force equal and opposite direction on the first object • “ For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction”

  40. Newton’s 3rd Law • Examples:

  41. Newton’s 3rd Law

  42. Newton’s 3rd Law • If a horse pulls on a cart and the cart pulls on the horse with equal and opposite force, How does the cart ever move forward? • Remember: Motion depends on NET FORCE acting on a body.

  43. Newton’s 3rd Law If a brick is dropped from a bridge into a valley. Earth pulls on the rock. Newton’s 3rd Law states the rock pulls on Earth with equal and opposite force. Why don’t we see Earth’s acceleration? massR = .2kg Find the acceleration of the ball and the Earth: F = ma g = 10m/s2 massE = 6 x 1024 kg

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