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Newton’s 2nd Law.

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Presentation on theme: "Newton’s 2nd Law."— Presentation transcript:

1 Newton’s 2nd Law

2 What is acceleration? What are some examples of acceleration you observe in your every day experiences? Today: Newton’s 2nd Law

3 Today’s Goal To begin to explain how force, mass, and acceleration relate to each other.

4 2nd Law F = M x A F = Force, M = Mass, A = acceleration

5 2nd Law The net force of an object is equal to the product of its mass and acceleration, or F=ma.

6 F= M x A What does it mean? What is a force? What is mass?
A force is a push or a pull. Anything that makes an object move, or stop moving. What is mass? Anything that occupies space

7 What does that mean? F= M x A What is an Acceleration?

8 Acceleration Acceleration = speeding up????
Acceleration – the rate at which velocity changes Can be an: Increase in speed Decrease in speed Change in direction

9 Types of acceleration Increasing speed Decreasing speed
Example: Car speeds up at green light Decreasing speed Example: Car slows down at stop light Changing direction Example: Car takes turn (can be at constant speed) screeeeech

10 Question How can a car be accelerating if its speed is a constant 65 km/h? If it is changing directions it is accelerating

11 Question There are 3 controls in a car that make it accelerate. What are they? Accelerator Brakes Steering wheel

12 F= M x A Back to Newton…. Units of Force
When mass is in kilograms and acceleration is in m/s/s, the unit of force is in Newtons (N). One Newton is equal to the force required to accelerate one kilogram of mass at one meter/second/second.

13 2nd Law F= M x A How much force is needed to accelerate a 1400 kilogram car 2 meters per second/per second? 1) Write the formula F = m x a 2) Fill in given numbers and units F = 1400 kg x 2 meters per second/second 3) Solve for the unknown 2800 kg-meters/second/second or 2800 N

14 Newton’s 2nd Law Force, Mass, and Acceleration are all proportional (F, M, A). Proportional – always behaves in a predicted way If one factor changes, you know how the others will change. i.e. When you change the force, you can predict how acceleration will change.

15 Q: If you change mass, how will it affect A or F
Q: If you change mass, how will it affect A or F? Consider the volleyball and bowling ball (different mass): how will that affect the force you need to achieve the same acceleration? A: you will need more force to push the bowling ball ? = M x A ? = M x A

16 Q: What will happen to the acceleration if you use the same force on the bowling ball and the volley ball? A: the bowling ball will accelerate slower, and the volley ball will accelerate faster. F = M x ? F = M x ?

17 Newton’s 2nd Law is simply an algebraic expression showing how force (F), mass (M), and Acceleration (A) relate to each other: F= M x A


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