Revision and Consolidation 08/09/2002By Mr. NGAN HON SHING1 Revision and Consolidation.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Momentum Impulse, Linear Momentum, Collisions Linear Momentum Product of mass and linear velocity Symbol is p; units are kgm/s p = mv Vector whose direction.
Advertisements

Collision. Point of Contact  When two objects collide there is a point of contact.  The moment of contact is short. Impulse due to external forces is.
Linear Momentum and Collisions
Notes - Energy A. Work and Energy. What is Energy?  Energy is the ability to produce change in an object or its environment.  Examples of forms of energy:
1© Manhattan Press (H.K.) Ltd. Work Energy Energy 3.6 Work, energy and power Power Power.
Chapter 12 Linear Kinematics of Human Movement
Chapter 7 Linear Momentum. Chapter Momentum Linear Momentum- product of mass times velocity p=mvp=momentum units=kg.m/sec Restate Newton’s second.
Physics Chapter 11 Energy.
Work Done by a Varying Force (1D). Force Due to a Spring – Hooke’s Law.
Energy is Conserved. Page 220 Example 7.9 Gravitational Potential Energy = mgh = mgy Elastic Potential Energy = ½ky 2 F spring = ky Kinetic Energy = ½mv.
Notes: Chapter 11.3 Newton’s Third Law of Motion and Momentum.
Jump to first page Chapter 4 Kinetics of a Particle xx f(x)f(x) x ff max min.
Momentum and Its Conservation
Force and Potential Energy (3D). Energy Diagram We can glean a lot of information by looking at graph of the potential energy.
REVISION MOMENTUM. the product of an object's mass and its velocity a vector quantity with the same direction as the velocity of the object. MOMENTUM.
Equilibrium Forces and Unbalanced Forces. Topic Overview A force is a push or a pull applied to an object. A net Force (F net ) is the sum of all the.
Impulse and Momentum Chapter problems Serway –5,6,10,13,16,17,18,27,29,33,43,44,52,54,59,60 –cw.prenhall.com/~bookbind/pubbooks/giancoli.
Energy Momentum, Collisions, Impulse. Momentum A measure of how hard it is to stop a moving object A measure of how hard it is to stop a moving object.
Momentum What is momentum? ~ Newton’s Quality of Motion Use the 2 nd Law…F = ma to describe how momentum can change when a force acts on it. F=ma m ∆v.
Physics 218 Lecture 15: Momentum Alexei Safonov.
3.1 The 3 rd Law of Motion, Momentum and Impulse.
Sect. 1.2: Mechanics of a System of Particles Generalization to many (N) particle system: –Distinguish External & Internal Forces. –Newton’s 2 nd Law.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture Outline Chapter 9 Physics, 4 th Edition James S. Walker.
Momentum.
02 Mechanics BY HEI MAN KWOK. 2.1 KINEMATICS Definitions Displacement: distance moved in a particular direction – vector; SL Unit: m; Symbol: s Velocity:
© 2007 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their.
Momentum. The p = m = mass v = velocity Unit: Vector Direction of momentum is determined by the direction of the.
Energy Chapter 11. Forms of Energy  There are two forms of energy.  Kinetic energy is energy due to the motion of the object. Energy of movement. 
Work and Energy 5. What is a force? a. change in speed over time b. the tendency to resist change in motion c. a push or pull d. apparent weightlessness.
Notes: Chapter 11.3 Newton’s Third Law of Motion and Momentum.
ICP “Work, Energy and Momentum”. NGSS HS-PS3-1 Create a computational model to calculate the change in the energy of one component in a system when the.
NEWTON’S 3 RD LAW The Third Law of Motion. NEWTON’S 3 RD LAW  For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction!
Sect. 9.2: Impulse & Momentum
ICP “Work, Energy and Momentum”. Core Content l SC-HS l Students will: select or construct accurate and appropriate representations for motion (visual,
More force is needed to quickly stop a baseball thrown at 95 mph than to quickly stop a baseball thrown at 45 mph, even though they both have the same.
Energy – the ability to do work W = Fd = m a d V f 2 = V i 2 + 2a  x V f 2 - V i 2 = + 2a  x V f 2 - V i 2 = a  x 2.
Newton’s Laws of Motion. 1 st Law of Motion (Law of Inertia) A body at rest will remain at rest.
 The metric system – units, prefixes  Unit conversions  Algebra and trigonometry  Orders of magnitude.
Energy Chapter 11 Physics I. Energy Energy is the property that describes an object’s ability to change itself or the environment around it. Energy can.
Chapter 10 Section 4 Newton’s Third Law. Newton’s Third Law of Motion Newton’s third law of motion states that if one object exerts a force on another.
9th Physical Science Week of Nov 9 th – Nov 13 th.
Conservation of Energy Or the More things change the more they stay the same.
Work and Energy Chapter 6.
CONSERVATION OF LINEAR MOMENTUM
Momentum and collisions
Chapter 8 Conservation of Linear Momentum Linear momentum; Momentum conservation Impulse Total kinetic energy of a system March 8, /11/2018 Phys.
Physics Vocabulary Words
Newton's Third Law of Motion and Momentum
Homework Questions?.
Conservation of Momentum and collisions
Linear Momentum.
Lecture Outline Chapter 9 Physics, 4th Edition James S. Walker
Section 11.2 Conservation of Energy
AP MC Problems A how to guide..
Momentum.
Newton’s 2nd Law of Motion
IMPULSE AND MOMENTUM When ever things collide, I’ve heard,
Energy comes in many forms: mechanical, electrical , magnetic, solar,
Conservation of Energy
MOMENTUM (p) is defined as the product of the mass and velocity -is based on Newton’s 2nd Law F = m a F = m Δv t F t = m Δv IMPULSE MOMENTUM.
Chapter 3, Section 3 Notes The Third Law of Motion.
Lecture Outline Chapter 9 Physics, 4th Edition James S. Walker
Dynamics and Kinematics
Impulse and Momentum Chapter 7.
Momentum, Mass, and Velocity
Newton’s 3rd Law and Law of Gravitation
Lecture Outline Chapter 9 Physics, 4th Edition James S. Walker
7.3 Conservation of Momentum
Newton’s Third Law of Motion
Section 3 Newton’s Third Law p. 360
Presentation transcript:

Revision and Consolidation 08/09/2002By Mr. NGAN HON SHING1 Revision and Consolidation

08/09/2002By Mr. NGAN HON SHING2 Newton ’ s Law  Newton ’ s 1 st Law  Newton ’ s 2 nd Law The net force on an object  rate of change of momentum of an object. F  dp/dt => dp/dt = d(mv)/dt = m(dv/dt)+v(dm/dt) = ma where k=1  Newton ’ s 3 rd Law Action and reaction are equal but opposite. They will not cancel each other. Show 3 forces on diagram. 1 balanced forces and 1 action-reaction pair.

Revision and Consolidation 08/09/2002By Mr. NGAN HON SHING3 Newton ’ s 3 rd Law (A-R pair) W (earth -> block) R (floor -> block) A (block -> floor) Balanced Forces: W and R – acting on the same object A-R pair: A and R – acting on 2 different objects. They will not cancel each other.

Revision and Consolidation 08/09/2002By Mr. NGAN HON SHING4 Conservation of linear momentum It ’ s true for all collision if there is no external force acting on the colliding bodies. m 1 u 1 +m 2 u 2 = m 1 v 1 +m 2 v 2 Types of collisions: Elastic collision (perfectly/completely) No energy lost (Partially) Inelastic collision Energy lost Completely inelastic collision Energy lost is max.

Revision and Consolidation 08/09/2002By Mr. NGAN HON SHING5 Conservation of linear momentum We cannot use the above equation to identify what type of collision it is. Conservation of mechanical energy: If the above eqt is true, it is an elastic collision.

Revision and Consolidation 08/09/2002By Mr. NGAN HON SHING6 Energy (work done, PE, KE & P) Work done = W.D. = +ve => energy gained W.D. = -ve => energy lost KE = PE = gravitational potential energy = mgh P = rate of change of energy = = Fv

Revision and Consolidation 08/09/2002By Mr. NGAN HON SHING7 Derive KE in terms of m and v WD by F = F. s = (ma) s = u=0 => Wd by F = ½ mv 2 s F u=0 v