Newton’s 3rd Law of Motion

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Advertisements

I. Law of Inertia II. F=ma III. Action-Reaction While most people know what Newton's laws say, many people do not know what they mean (or simply do not.
Newton’s Laws of Motion I. Law of Inertia II. F=ma III. Action-Reaction.
Action & Reaction Forces
Newton’s 3rd Law For every action…...
Newton’s Third Law Newton’s third law of motion describes action-reaction pairs this way. When one object exerts a force on a second object, the second.
NEWTON’S THIRD LAW OF MOTION 8 TH GRADE PGS
What is Newton’s Third Law
For every action….. Newton’s 3rd Law.
Newton’s Laws of Motion I Law of Inertia II F=MA III Action-Reaction.
Newton’s Third Law of Motion
N EWTON ’ S THIRD LAW OF MOTION Action/Reaction Pairs.
Newton’s Third Law of Motion Please read pages for the first 10 min of class.
Objectives: The student will be able to: State Newton's 3rd law of motion and give examples that illustrate that law. Apply Newton’s 3 rd law of motion.
Newton’s Laws of Motion 1 st – Law of Inertia 2 nd – F=ma 3 rd – Action-Reaction.
Newton’s Laws of Motion CHAPTER 10, Sections 2-5 Notes I. Law of Inertia I. Law of Inertia II. F=M x A II. F=M x A III. Action-Reaction III. Action-Reaction.
Newton’s 3 rd Law Action-Reaction Forces For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. According to Newton, whenever two objects interact.
8.3 Newton’s laws of motion. Loose change experiment, p.269.
Newton’s Laws of Motion I. Law of Inertia II. F=ma III. Action-Reaction.
Newton’s Laws of Motion March 30, Objectives 1. Explain the three laws of motion.
Newton’s 3 rd Law For every action….. Action and Reaction Newton’s third law describes something else that happens when one object exerts a force on.
Newton’s Laws of Motion I. Law of Inertia II. F=ma III. Action-Reaction.
Newton’s 3 rd Law of Motion CH 7 Physics (A) Winter,
Newton’s 3 rd Law For every action….. (The “Action Reaction Law”)
Bell Ringer Work on Chapter 10 Vocabulary quickly.Work on Chapter 10 Vocabulary quickly. If you do not finish, you will need to finish for homework.If.
Newton’s Laws of Motion I. Law of Inertia II. F=ma III. Action-Reaction.
Newton’s First and Third Laws of Motion First we need to define the word FORCE: The cause of motion (what causes objects to move) Two types of forces.
Below is a collection of statements explaining Newton's second law of motion in words similar to those often presented in high school and college textbooks.
Newton’s 3rd Law & Momentum
Newton’s 3rd Law.
Newton’s 3rd Law Lab Essential Question: How does Newton’s 3rd Law of Action-Reaction relate to real-life scenarios.
Net Force Problems Find the net force for the following problems:
Science Starter: Monday March 6, 2017 Day 1
Newton’s Third Law of Motion
Chapter 11 Section 3.
Newton’s Third Law of Motion
Newton’s Third Law of Motion
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Motion & Force Newton’s 2nd Law of Motion
Chapter 11 Section 3.
Sign Up For Reminders Text to: On message
Chapter 11 Newton’s Laws of Motion
Newton’s 3rd Law of Motion
Chapter 2 – Lesson 4.
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Newton’s Third Law of Motion
Newton’s 3rd Law of Motion
What is Newton’s 3rd Law of Motion?
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Warm Up 1. ________ opposes motion between surfaces that are touching.
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Sir Isaac Newton and his Discoveries
Newton’s 3rd Law For every action…...
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Newton’s Third Law of Motion
Complete the reading on Newton’s Third Law
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Is under the document camera.
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Newton’s 3rd Law of Motion
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Presentation transcript:

Newton’s 3rd Law of Motion

Newton’s 3rd Law – For every action, there is an equal but opposite reaction. Example: When you push on a wall, the wall pushes back on you with a force equal in strength to the force you exerted but opposite in direction.

- According to Newton’s third law of motion: forces always act in equal but opposite pairs - The forces exerted by two objects on each other are often called an action-reaction force pair - Action and reaction force pairs don’t cancel because they act on DIFFERENT objects

Newton’s 3rd Law http://youtu.be/cP0Bb3WXJ_k

Jumping – when you jump, you push down on the ground. Examples: Jumping – when you jump, you push down on the ground. The ground then pushes up on you. It is this upward force that pushes you into the air.

Examples: Birds Flying – when a bird flies, its wings push in a downward and backward direction. - This pushes air back downward and backward. - By Newton’s third law, the air pushes back on the bird in the opposite directions – upward and forward - This force keeps the bird in the air and propels it forward

Your Turn… Identify the action and reaction in the following scenarios A fish’s fins pushing water backwards Action – Reaction –

A butterfly’s wings push air downwards Action – Reaction –   A car hits a cement wall Tires on a car push the road backwards

Law’s of Motion – Black and Yellow Remix http://youtu.be/vZXJnqUEXRA

Newton’s Third Law on Large and Small Objects Walking on Earth - When you walk forward, you push backward on the ground - Your shoe pushes Earth backward, and Earth pushes your shoe forward - Earth has so much mass compared to you that it does not move noticeably when you push it

- If you step on something that has less mass than you do, like a skateboard, you can see it being pushed back

A Rocket Launch - When the rocket fuel is ignited, a hot gas is produced - As the gas molecules collide with the inside engine walls, the walls exert a force that pushes them out of the bottom of the engine - This downward push is the action force

The reaction force is the upward push on the rocket engine by the gas molecules This is the thrust that propels the rocket upward