Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Advertisements

Chapter 3: Force and Motion
Unit 4 FORCES AND THE LAWS OF MOTION
Motion, Speed, Acceleration
PS-5 Test Review. Questions 1 & 2 Distance – 60m/ magnitude only Displacement 10 m east/ magnitude and direction.
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Forces and Newton’s Laws NOTES
Dr. Steve Peterson Physics 1025F Mechanics NEWTON’S LAWS Dr. Steve Peterson
Newton’s Laws The Study of Dynamics Isaac Newton Arguably the greatest physical genius ever. Came up with 3 Laws of Motion to explain the observations.
Forces Force is the cause of acceleration. It is defined as a push or a pull.
Newton’s Laws of Motion A journey into inertia, net force, and other topics….
L-6 – Newton's Second Law Objects have a property called inertia which causes them to resist changes in their motion (Newton’s1st Law or Galileo’s law.
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Chapter 4 Newton’s First Law of Motion: Inertia. Newton’s First Law - Inertia In Fancy Terms: Every object continues in a state of rest, or of motion.
Newton’s 2nd Law some examples
Laws of Motion Review.
The Laws of Motion Unit 3 Presentation 1.
Physics the study of the relationship between matter and energy.
Physics Chapter 6 Forces. Newton’s Laws of Motion 1 st Law (Law of inertia) –An object moving at constant velocity keeps moving at that velocity unless.
Newton’s Laws of Motion. Newton’s Laws of Motion 1. An object in motion tends to stay in motion and an object at rest tends to stay at rest unless acted.
Force A push or pull exerted on an object..
Forces in 1 Dimension Chapter Force and Motion Force is push or pull exerted on object Forces change motion –Makes it important to know the forces.
Newton’s Laws of Motion
1 Newton’s Laws Isaac Newton born: Dec 25, st. Law of motion: The Law of Inertia (Actually, this is not Newton's idea, it is a restatement of.
Chapter 4 Forces Forces and Interaction Force – a “push or pull” Contact Force – you physically push on a wall Long-range Force – like magnets or gravity.
Teacher Reference Page This powerpoint is a presentation of Forces and Newton’s Laws. It probably goes through more than is necessary for students to know.
Newton’s Laws of Motion 1-Courses/current-courses/08sr-newton.htm system.org/~history/PictDisplay/Galileo.html.
What is the normal force for a 500 kg object resting on a horizontal surface if a massless rope with a tension of 150 N is acting at a 45 o angle to the.
Forces and the Laws of Motion
Newton’s Laws of Motion We have studied “kinematics”, or the description of motion. Now, we look at “dynamics”, the causes of motion.
Notes – Chapter 4 – Forces in One Dimension. Force Force - Any push or pull acting on an object F = vector notation for the magnitude and direction F.
Forces & Newton’s Laws Ch. 4. Forces What is a force? –Push or pull one body exerts on another –Units = Newton (N) –Examples: List all of the forces that.
What is a Force? A force is a push or a pull causing a change in velocity or causing deformation.
Newton’s Laws of Motion 1 st - Inertia. 2 nd - F = ma 3 rd - Action/Reaction Take notes when see.
L-6 – Newton's Second Law Objects have a property called inertia which causes them to resist changes in their motion (Newton’s1 st Law or Galileo’s law.
Do now! Homework Due Weds 10th Feb Complete trolley AND balls investigation.
Chapters 5-6 Test Review Forces & Motion Forces  “a push or a pull”  A force can start an object in motion or change the motion of an object.  A force.
Ch. 4 Newton’s First Law of Motion
Remember!!!! Force Vocabulary is due tomorrow
Unit Review FORCE & MOTION. 1. EXPLAIN HOW A PARACHUTE SLOWS THE RATE OF A SKYDIVERS FALL. The use of friction of air being caught by the chute…called.
Chapter 4 Newton’s First Law of Motion: Inertia. Newton’s First Law - Inertia In Fancy Terms: Every object continues in a state of rest, or of motion.
Introduction to Newton’s Laws
Unit 2 1D Vectors & Newton’s Laws of Motion. A. Vectors and Scalars.
 Force: A push or a pull Describes why objects move Defined by Sir Isaac Newton.
Physics the study of the relationship between matter and energy
Dynamics!.
Basic Information: Force: A push or pull on an object Forces can cause an object to: Speed up Slow down Change direction Basically, Forces can cause an.
Do now! Can you continue the questions you started last lesson? (Page 27 questions 6, 7 & 8. Page 29 questions 1 & 2) Bunny suicide #1.
Newton’s Laws Inertia What is a Force?  The idea the forces caused motion was professed by Aristotle in the 4 th century B.C.  Force – a push or pull.
Force and Motion The only reason an object changes it velocity is because a force acts on the object. Remember a change in velocity can be either a change.
Forces and Motion Forces in One Dimension. Force and Motion  Force  Force is a push or pull exerted on an object  Cause objects to speed up, slow down,
WARM UP: 1. Calculate the acceleration of a bag of softball gear weighing 50 N if pulled with a force of 25 N. 2. Calculate the force of a cars tires on.
Forces and Newton’s 3 Laws. What is a force? Push or pull Produce changes in motion or direction.
Inertia! Kinematics- Study of motion of objects –How objects move Dynamics- Study of motion of objects WITH FORCES –Why objects move Mass- Amount of Matter.
FORCE & MOTION. I. Force Definition – a push or pull Measured in Newtons (N) – by a spring scale.
1 Physics: Chapter 4 Forces & the Laws of Motion Topics:4-1 Changes in Motion 4-2 Newton’s First Law 4-3 Newton’s Second & Third Laws 4-4 Everyday Forces.
Topic 2 Mechanics Use the syllabus and this REVISION POWERPOINT to aid your revision.
Inertia or Weight? Newton’s 1 st & 2 nd Laws Name that Force Newton’s 3 rd Law
Newton’s 1 st Law An object continues in uniform motion in a straight line or at rest unless a resultant external force acts.
Lec. 6 – The Laws of Motion Objects have a property called inertia which causes them to resist changes in their motion (Newton’s1 st Law or Galileo’s law.
“Law of Acceleration” Forces can be BALANCED or UNBALANCED Balanced forces are equal in size (magnitude) and opposite in direction UNbalanced.
The Nature of Force and Motion 1.Force – A push or a pull – How strong it is and in what direction? 2.Net Force – The sum of all forces acting on an object.
Do now! Can you write in your planners that you will be having a TEST on everything we’ve done so far on Friday 1st October.
Chapter 4 Objectives: 1) Define FORCE; including units.
FORCE A force is any influence that can change the velocity of a body. Forces can act either through the physical contact of two objects (contact forces:
Newton’s Laws Of Motion
Force A push or pull exerted on an object..
Bell Ringer Socrative Quiz- Newton’s Laws Room: LEE346
Presentation transcript:

Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newtons Laws of Motion Thats me!

Newtons 1 st Law An object continues in uniform motion in a straight line or at rest unless a resultant external force acts

Newtons 1 st Law An object continues in uniform motion in a straight line or at rest unless a resultant external force acts Does this make sense?

Newtons 1 st law Newtons first law was actually discovered by Galileo. Newton nicked it!

Newtons first law Galileo imagined a marble rolling in a very smooth (i.e. no friction) bowl.

Newtons first law If you let go of the ball, it always rolls up the opposite side until it reaches its original height (this actually comes from the conservation of energy).

Newtons first law No matter how long the bowl, this always happens

Newtons first law No matter how long the bowl, this always happens. constant velocity

Newtons first law Galileo imagined an infinitely long bowl where the ball never reaches the other side!

Newtons first law The ball travels with constant velocity until its reaches the other side (which it never does!). Galileo realised that this was the natural state of objects when no (resultant ) forces act. constant velocity

Other examples Imagine a (giant) dog falling from a tall building

Other examples To start the dog is travelling slowly. The main force on the dog is gravity, with a little air resistance gravity Air resistance

Other examples As the dog falls faster, the air resistance increases (note that its weight (force of gravity) stays the same) gravity Air resistance

Other examples Eventually the air resistance grows until it equals the force of gravity. At this time the dog travels with constant velocity (called its terminal velocity) gravity Air resistance

Oooops!

Another example Imagine Mr Porter cycling at constant velocity.

Newtons 1 st law He is providing a pushing force. Constant velocity

Newtons 1 st law There is an equal and opposite friction force. Constant velocity Pushing force friction

Newtons second law Newtons second law concerns examples where there is a resultant force. I thought of this law myself!

Lets go back to Mr Porter on his bike. Remember when the forces are balanced (no resultant force) he travels at constant velocity. Constant velocity Pushing force friction

Newtons 2nd law Now lets imagine what happens if he pedals faster. Pushing force friction

Newtons 2nd law His velocity changes (goes faster). He accelerates! Pushing force friction acceleration Remember from last year that acceleration is rate of change of velocity. In other words acceleration = (change in velocity)/time

Newtons 2nd law Now imagine what happens if he stops pedalling. friction

Newtons 2nd law He slows down (decellerates). This is a negative acceleration. friction

Newtons 2nd law So when there is a resultant force, an object accelerates (changes velocity) Pushing force friction Mr Porters Porche

Newtons 2 nd law There is a mathematical relationship between the resultant force and acceleration. Resultant force (N) = mass (kg) x acceleration (m/s 2 ) F R = ma Its physics, theres always a mathematical relationship!

An example What will be Mr Poters acceleration? Pushing force (100 N) Friction (60 N) Mass of Mr Porter and bike = 100 kg

An example Resultant force = 100 – 60 = 40 N F R = ma 40 = 100a a = 0.4 m/s 2 Pushing force (100 N) Friction (60 N) Mass of Mr Porter and bike = 100 kg

Newtons 3 rd law If a body A exerts a force on body B, body B will exert an equal but opposite force on body A. Hand (body A) exerts force on table (body B) Table (body B) exerts force on hand (body A)

Dont worry! Well do more on Newtons 3 rd law next week.

Free-body diagrams

Shows the magnitude and direction of all forces acting on a single body The diagram shows the body only and the forces acting on it.

Examples Mass hanging on a rope W (weight) T (tension in rope)

Examples Inclined slope W (weight) R (normal reaction force) F (friction) If a body touches another body there is a force of reaction or contact force. The force is perpendicular to the body exerting the force

Examples String over a pulley T (tension in rope) W1W1 W1W1

Examples Ladder leaning against a wall R R F F W

Resolving vectors into components

It is sometime useful to split vectors into perpendicular components

Resolving vectors into components

A cable car question

Tension in the cables? N ? ? 10°

Vertically = 2 X ? X sin10° N ? ? 10° ? X sin10°

Vertically /2xsin10° = ? N ? ? 10° ? X sin10°

? = N N ? ? 10° ? X sin10°

What happens as the angle deceases? N ? ? θ ? = /2 x sinθ

Lets try some questions! Page 67 Question 2 Page 68 Questions 6, 8, 10. Page 73 Questions 3, 4, 5 Page 74 Question 9, 12 Page 75 Question 14 Page 84 Questions 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9 Page 85 Questions 13, 16, 20, 21.