ISNS 3371 - Phenomena of Nature A Rifle and a Bullet When a bullet is fired from a rifle, the rifle recoils due to the interaction between the bullet and.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
By Cade and Georgia.  Newton’s laws of motion, including an understanding of force, mass and weight, acceleration and inertia applied to sport and physical.
Advertisements

Honors Physics Impulse and Momentum. Impulse = Momentum Consider Newton’s 2 nd Law and the definition of acceleration Units of Impulse: Units of Momentum:
Impulse and Momentum Honors Physics.
Physics 207: Lecture 11, Pg 1 Lecture 11 Goals: Assignment: l Read through Chapter 10 l MP HW5, due Wednesday 3/3 Chapter 9: Momentum & Impulse Chapter.
Momentum and Inertia. Momentum Momentum = mass x velocity MV = P Momentum is inertia in motion. A moving object has more p than an object with less m.
Notes Chapter 8 Momentum Objectives:
Chapter 6 Momentum 1.MOMENTUM Momentum - inertia in motion Momentum = mass times velocity Units - kg m/s or sl ft/s.
Chapter 7 Impulse and Momentum.
Momentum Chapter 7. Momentum Momentum – the product of the mass and the velocity of an object (inertia in motion) momentum = mv Momentum is a vector quantity.
Chapter 6 Momentum Impulse Impulse Changes Momentum Bouncing
AP Physics Impulse and Momentum. Which do you think has more momentum?
Momentum and Impulse Chapter 7.
Momentum Chapter 8. Momentum Chapter 8 Objectives Define momentum. Define impulse and describe how it affects changes in momentum. Explain why an impulse.
Ch. 8 Momentum and its conservation
Momentum and Impulse Vectorman productions present: A Nick enterprise: this product is intended for the serious physics student, if you are not a serious.
Chapter 6 Momentum and Collisions. Chapter Objectives Define linear momentum Compare the momentum of different objects Describe impulse Conservation of.
Momentum and Impulse Vectorman productions present: A Nick enterprise: this product is intended for the serious physics student, if you are not a serious.
Momentum Momentum is defined as “Inertia in Motion” p = mv.
Lecture Outlines Chapter 9 Physics: Principles and Problems.
ISNS Phenomena of Nature apparent weight - weight force that we actually sense not the downward force of gravity, but the normal (upward) force.
Chapter 12: Forces Section 3.
LAW OF CONSERVATION OF MOMENTUM
Momentum & Impulse Level 1 Physics.
Chapter 7 Impulse and Momentum. There are many situations when the force on an object is not constant.
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.
Chapter 4 Forces in One Dimension. 4.1 Force and Motion Force – A push or a pull exerted on an object. May cause a change in velocity:  Speed up  Slow.
Reading Quiz - Momentum
Linear Momentum Impulse & Collisions. What is momentum?  Momentum is a measure of how hard it is to stop or turn a moving object.  What characteristics.
Iraq moves to defuse war momentum Storm Gains Momentum, But Not Power, In Trek Across Gulf Group hopes to gain Momentum with improv events Push For FDA.
Momentum – Impulse Collisions
Unit 4: Momentum and Energy Chap. 7 Momentum Which is harder to stop, a truck traveling at 55 mi/hr or a small car traveling at 55 mi/hr?  Why?
Chapter 7 Impulse and Momentum.
M o m e n t u m Momentum is… Inertia in motion Mass x Velocity.
Bouncing and Momentum Change
Physics 218 Lecture 15: Momentum Alexei Safonov.
1 AGENDA 13-NOV: PJAS Questions? PJAS Questions? Notes – Unit 4: Momentum (chapter 5) Notes – Unit 4: Momentum (chapter 5) CW – Conservation of Momentum.
LAWS OF MOTION.
Chapter 7 – Momentum Inertia in motion!!! An object in motion will stay in motion until a force acts to stop it. Momentum = mass x velocity (kg * m/s)
Chapter 7 Impulse and Momentum. 7.1 The Impulse-Momentum Theorem There are many situations when the force on an object is not constant.
Chapter 7 Momentum. Remember: Inertia is the resistance of any moving or nonmoving object to change its state of motion.
Momentum: Unit 5. What is Momentum?  Momentum: ___________ in motion  Momentum= Mass x Velocity  ____________ = Mass x Speed – when direction is not.
Chapter 7: Momentum I. Momentum (7.1) A. momentum– “inertia in motion” 1.Mass of an object multiplied by its velocity Momentum = mass x velocity.
 car crashes car crashes 
CH 5- MOMENTUM BIG IDEA: THE FORCE ACTING ON AN OBJECT MULTIPLIED BY THE TIME THAT FORCE ACTS EQUALS THE OBJECTS CHANGE IN MOMENTUM.
A100 Movie Special Tuesday, March 23 Swain West 119 7:00 pm (153 minutes) Winner of several awards 20 activity points! BYOP (Bring Your Own Popcorn)
Newton’s Laws of Motion. What happens when one particle collides with another particle (of the same mass)? What is an elastic collision? What is an inelastic.
PHY 101: Lecture The Impulse-Momentum Theorem 7.2 The Principle of Conservation of Linear Momentum 7.3 Collision in One Dimension 7.4 Collisions.
Chapter 7 Impulse and Momentum. 7.1 The Impulse-Momentum Theorem There are many situations when the force on an object is not constant.
Bell Ringer After reading the article Does slamming on the brakes save your brake pads? Do you believe this saves gas?
French philosopher, mathematician and physicist Rene Descartes thought of motion as being quantifiable…but not solely based on an object’s.
DYNAMICS Dynamics is the study of things that move, ….. And why they move.
Momentum, impulse and yet another conservation principle
Unit 5 Momentum Impulse Impulse Changes Momentum Bouncing
Momentum and Collisions
Chapter 7 Impulse and Momentum.
Momentum – Impulse Collisions
Chapter 6 Momentum Impulse Impulse Changes Momentum Bouncing
Chapter 8.
Momentum, impulse and yet another conservation principle
Chapter 6 Momentum.
Chapter 7 Impulse and Momentum.
Momentum, impulse and yet another conservation principle
Impulse and Momentum Honors Physics.
Chapter 7 Impulse and Momentum.
Chapter 7 Impulse and Momentum.
Impulse and Momentum Honors Physics.
Momentum Ch. 6.
LAW OF CONSERVATION OF MOMENTUM
Vectorman productions present: A Nick enterprise:
Chapter 6 Momentum Impulse Impulse Changes Momentum Bouncing
Presentation transcript:

ISNS Phenomena of Nature A Rifle and a Bullet When a bullet is fired from a rifle, the rifle recoils due to the interaction between the bullet and the rifle. The force the rifle exerts on the bullet is equal and opposite to the force the bullet exerts on the rifle. But the acceleration of the bullet is much larger that the acceleration of the rifle - due to Newton’s 2nd law: a = F/m The acceleration due to a force is inversely proportional to the mass. The force on the rifle and the bullet is the same but the mass of the rifle is much larger than the the mass of the bullet so the acceleration of the rifle is much less than the acceleration of the bullet.

ISNS Phenomena of Nature Tension Consider a block being pulled by a rope. The person doing the pulling at one end of the rope is not in contact with the block, and cannot exert a direct force on the block. Rather a force is exerted on the rope, which transmits that force to the block. The force experienced by the block from the rope is called the stretching force, commonly referred to as tension. Tension is actually not a force - tension transmits the stretching force. A force always has a direction - the tension in a string or rope must follow the rope! The tension may have to extend around corners, over and under pulleys, etc. So, tension transmits a force through a string or rope, but tension is not a force. Tension doesn't work exactly the way force does.

ISNS Phenomena of Nature Suppose you hang a 5 Newton weight from a string, and hold the other end of the string in your hand. If the weight (and the string and your hand) is at rest, then the weight exerts a 5 N downward force on the lower end of the string, and you exert a 5 N upward force on the upper end of the string. What is the stretching force/tension in the string? It is possible to build very plausible arguments that the tension in the string is 10 N, or that it is 0 N, or that it is 5 N - but what is it, really, and why? Remember - tension transmits the force. It would be the same as if you were holding the weight in your hand - the force on your hand would be 5 N. Therefore the stretching force/tension is 5 N. In a tug-of-war, the tension in the rope is produced by the people pulling on opposite ends of the rope. The forces at either end of the rope are equal and opposite. What is the tension in the rope? What happens if a 200 lb man wearing socks and a 100 lb girl wearing rubber-soled shoes have a tug-of-war? Who wins?

ISNS Phenomena of Nature Momentum Momentum is mass times velocity, a vector quantity: Mom=mv The more massive an object, the greater its momentum. The greater the velocity of an object, the larger its momentum. The momentum of an object is changed by applying a force: - the larger the applied force, the greater the change in momentum. - the longer the force is applied, the greater the change in momentum

ISNS Phenomena of Nature Impulse Impulse of a force is the force times the time over which the force acts on a body. I = F x ∆T ∆ means a change in a quantity - ∆T is the time over which the force is acting. From Newton’s second law: Therefore, an Impulse produces a change in momentum of a body.

ISNS Phenomena of Nature Process of minimizing an impact force - approached from the definition of the impulse of force: If an impact stops a moving object, then the change in momentum is a fixed quantity, and extending the time of the collision will decrease the impact force by the same factor. This principle is applied in many common-sense situations: If you jump to the ground from any height, you bend your knees upon impact, extending the time of collision and lessening the impact force. A boxer moves away from a punch, extending the time of impact and lessening the force. Automobiles are made to collapse upon impact, extending the time of collision and lessening the impact force. If you drop a glass on hard floor - it breaks. If you drop it on a soft carpet, the impact time is extended as the glass sinks into the carpet - impact force reduced - glass doesn’t break.

ISNS Phenomena of Nature Conservation of Momentum Law of Conservation of Momentum The total momentum of an isolated system is conserved, I.e., it remains constant. An outside or external force is required to change the momentum of an isolated system. The Law of Conservation of Momentum is an alternate way of stating Newton’s laws: 1. An object’s momentum will not change if left alone 2. A force can change an object’s momentum, but… 3. Another equal and opposite force simultaneously changes some other object’s momentum by same amount

ISNS Phenomena of Nature Collisions net momentum before collision = net momentum after collision In a collision, momentum is conserved because the forces acting are internal forces - momentum is simply redistributed.

ISNS Phenomena of Nature Elastic Collisions An elastic collision is one in which the objects collide without generating heat or being permanently deformed. The objects do not stick together - they “bounce”. Given two masses, m 1 and m 2 at initial velocities v 1 and v 2 After they collide, they have velocities V 1 and V 2 Conservation of momentum says that Solving for V 1 and V 2 (and using conservation of energy) gives

ISNS Phenomena of Nature Let v 2 = 0 and m 1 = 475 gr and m 2 = 266 gr

ISNS Phenomena of Nature Let v 2 = 0 and m 1 = 475 gr and m 2 = 266 gr m 1 (the heavier car) is still moving after the collision, but slower. m 2 (the lighter car) is moving after the collision with a velocity greater than the velocity of m 1 before the collision. Momentum is conserved A heavy car collides with a stationary lighter car

ISNS Phenomena of Nature Let v 2 = 0 and m 1 = 266 gr and m 2 = 475 gr m 1 (the lighter car) is still moving after the collision, but in the opposite direction. m 2 (the heavier car) is moving after the collision with a velocity smaller than the velocity of m 1 before the collision. Momentum is conserved A light car collides with a stationary heavier car

ISNS Phenomena of Nature m 1 = m 2 m 1 and m 2 simply switch velocities - it doesn’t matter whether they are going in the same or opposite directions. Momentum is conserved Two moving cars with the same mass collide

ISNS Phenomena of Nature Elastic Collisions in 2 Dimensions - Pool Remember: Momentum is a vector quantity - so the vector sum of the two balls’ momentum must equal the momentum of the que ball (the red ball) before collision. Note: the angle that the que ball and the object ball make after collision is always a right angle (we will show this later).

ISNS Phenomena of Nature

Inelestic Collisions In an inelastic collision, the objects stick together after collision. Again, momentum is conserved: V 1 = V 2 because the objects are moving together and:

ISNS Phenomena of Nature Two cars of the same mass and velocities equal but in the opposite direction: v 2 = -v 1 Velocity after the collision is 0 Two cars of the same mass, one moving and the other stationary: v 2 = 0 Velocity after collision is 1/2 velocity of m 1 before collision

ISNS Phenomena of Nature Angular Momentum Momentum associated with rotational or orbital motion angular momentum = mass x velocity x radius

ISNS Phenomena of Nature Torque and Conservation of Angular Momentum Conservation of angular momentum - like conservation of momentum - in the absence of a net torque (twisting force), the total angular momentum of a system remains constant Torque - twisting force

ISNS Phenomena of Nature A spinning skater speeds up as she brings her arms in and slows down as she spreads her arms because of conservation of angular momentum