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Chapter 1 - General Principles

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1 Chapter 1 - General Principles
11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

2 Chapter 1 General Principles
11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

3 Chapter 1 General Principles
Objectives To provide an introduction to the basic quantities and idealizations of mechanics. To give a statement of Newton’s laws of Motion and Gravitation. To review the principles for applying the SI system of units. To examine the standard procedures for performing numerical calculations. To present a general guide for problem solving. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

4 Chapter 1 General Principles
Definition Mechanics: Branch of physical sciences concerned with the state of rest or motion of bodies subjected to forces. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

5 Chapter 1 General Principles
Engineering Mechanics Solid Mechanics Fluid Mechanics Rigid Bodies Deformable Bodies Statics Dynamics 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

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Rigid Body Mechanics Statics – Bodies at rest Dynamics – Accelerated motion of bodies 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

7 Historical Development
Statics Depends on geometry and forces Simple machines levers pulleys inclined plane Archimedes ( B.C.) 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

8 Historical Development
Dynamics Accurate Measurement of time Galileo ( ) Newton( ) 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

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Basic Quantities Length meter foot Time second Mass kilogram slug Force newton pound 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

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Length Needed to locate the position of a point in space and describe the size of a physical system. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

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Time Conceived as a succession of events. Concepts of STATICS are time independent. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

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Mass A property of matter by which we can compare the action of one body to another. This property manifests itself as a gravitational attraction between two bodies and provide a qualitative measure of the resistance of matter to a change in velocity. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

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Force Generally considered as a push of a pull exerted by one body on another. Interaction occurs when there is direct contact between the bodies. Gravitational, electrical and magnetic forces do not require direct contact. Force is characterized by magnitude, direction and point of application. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

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Idealizations Particle - an object having mass but the size is neglected. Rigid Body - a combination of a large number of particles which remain in a fixed position relative to each other, both before and after the application of a force. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

15 Newton’s Three Laws of Motion
First Law: A particle originally at rest, or moving in a straight line with constant velocity, will remain in this state provided the particle is not subjected to unbalanced forces. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

16 Newton’s Three Laws of Motion
Second Law: A particle acted upon by an unbalanced force F experiences an acceleration a that has the same direction as the force and a magnitude that is directly proportional to the force. If F is applied to a particle of mass m then: F = ma. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

17 Newton’s Three Laws of Motion
Third Law: The mutual forces of action and reaction between two particles are equal, opposite and collinear. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

18 Newton’s Laws of Gravitational Attraction
Where: F = force of gravitation G = universal constant of gravitation m1,m2= mass of two particles r = distance between two particles 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

19 Chapter 1 General Principles
Weight m = mass of object m2 = mass of earth r = distance from center of earth to particle 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

20 Chapter 1 General Principles
Units Basic quantities (force, mass, length, time) are related by Newton’s second law. Units used to measure quantities are not all independent. Three of four units, called base units, are arbitrarily defined and the fourth is derived. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

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SI Units Modern version of metric system. Base units are length, time and mass, meter (m), second (s), and kilogram (kg) Acceleration of gravity: 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

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SI Units Force is derived quantity measured in unit called a newton 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

23 U.S. Customary Units (fps)
Base units are length, time and force. feet (ft), second (s), and pound (lb) Acceleration of gravity: 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

24 U.S. Customary Units (fps)
Mass is derived quantity measured in a unit called a slug: 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

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Systems of Units Name Length Time Mass Force SI meter (m) second (s) kilogram (kg) newton (N) US Customary foot (ft) slug (lb s2/ft pound (lb 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

26 Chapter 1 General Principles
Unit Conversions Unit Conversions 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

27 Chapter 1 General Principles
Prefixes for SI units 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

28 Chapter 1 General Principles
Concepts to Study Dimensional Homogeneity Significant Figures Rounding Off Numbers Calculations 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

29 Dimensional Homogeneity
Each of the terms of an equation must be expressed in the same units. s = v t + 1/2 a t2 s is position in meters v is velocity in m/s a is acceleration in m/s2 t is time in seconds m = m/s  s + m/s2  s2 = m 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

30 Chapter 1 General Principles
Significant Figures Accuracy specified by number of significant figures. Defined as any digit including a zero (provided it is not used to specify the location of a decimal point). 5604 and both have four significant figures 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

31 Chapter 1 General Principles
Engineering Notation Does 40 have one or two significant figures? Engineering notation uses powers of ten with exponents in multiples of three. 40 written as 0.04 (103) is forty to one significant figure and (103) is forty to two significant figures. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

32 Chapter 1 General Principles
Calculations When performing calculations retain a greater number of digits than the problem data. Engineers usually round off final answer to three significant figures. Intermediate calculations are usually done to four significant figures. Answer can never have more significant figures than given data! 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

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Convert 2 km/h to m/s. How many ft/s is this? SOLUTION: Since 1 km = 1000 m and 1 h = 3600 s, the conversion factors are arranged so that a cancellation of units can be applied. Recall that 1 ft = m 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

34 Procedure for Analysis
Read the problem carefully and correlate the actual physical situation with the theory studied. Draw necessary diagrams and tables. Apply relevant principles, generally in mathematical form. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

35 Procedure for Analysis
Solve the equations algebraically (without numbers) as far as possible, then obtain a numerical answer. Be sure to use a consistent set of units. Report the answer with no more significant figures than the accuracy of the given data. Decide if answer seems reasonable. Think about what the problem taught you! 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

36 Chapter 1 General Principles
Important Points Statics is the study of bodies at rest or moving with constant velocity. A particle has mass but a size that can be neglected. A rigid body does not deform under load. Concentrated forces are assumed to act at a point on a body. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

37 Chapter 1 General Principles
Important Points Newton’s three laws of motion must be memorized! Mass is a property of matter that does not change from one location to another. Weight is the gravitational attraction of the earth on a body or quantity of mass. Its magnitude depends on the location of the mass. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

38 Chapter 1 General Principles
Important Points In the SI system the unit of force is the newton. It is a derived quantity. Mass, length and time are the base quantities. In the SI system prefixes are used to denote large or small numerical quantities of a unit. Perform numerical calculation to several significant figures and report answers to three significant figures. Be sure that all equations are dimensionally homogeneous. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles

39 Chapter 1 General Principles
Objectives - Review To provide an introduction to the basic quantities and idealizations of mechanics. To give a statement of Newton’s laws of Motion and Gravitation. To review the principles for applying the SI system of units. To examine the standard procedures for performing numerical calculations. To present a general guide for problem solving. 11/14/2018 Chapter 1 General Principles


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