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Chapter 4 Why things move as they do. 4.1 Force: Why things accelerate Force: Any external influence that causes a body to accelerate Friction: A force.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 4 Why things move as they do. 4.1 Force: Why things accelerate Force: Any external influence that causes a body to accelerate Friction: A force."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 4 Why things move as they do

2 4.1 Force: Why things accelerate Force: Any external influence that causes a body to accelerate Friction: A force by one surface on another surface, due to the roughness of the surface Air Resistance: The resistive force that air molecules exert on an object moving through the air Force of Gravity: Downward pull by Earth on objects in Earth’s vicinity

3 4.2 Connecting Force and Acceleration Newton’s Theory: Forces cause acceleration, and no force is needed to keep a thing moving Inertia: A body’s ability to stay at rest or to maintain an unchanging speed and direction of motion whenever no force is exerted on it Mass: The amount of Inertia in an object (measured in kilograms) Acceleration = Force/mass Force is measured in Newtons (N) Newton is the amount of force that can give a 1 kg mass a 1 m/s 2 acceleration Weight and Inertia are different things!

4 4.3 Newton’s Law of Motion Law of Motion An object’s acceleration is determined by the net force exerted on it by its environment and by the object’s mass. The direction of the acceleration is the same as the direction of the net force. Quantitatively, the acceleration is proportional to the net force divided by the mass

5 4.4 Weight: Gravity’s Force on a body Weight: Net gravitational force exerted on an object by all other objects Normal Force: The force, perpendicular to a solid surface, that is exerted by any solid surface on any object touching it

6 4.5 The Law of Force Pairs Law of Force Pairs Every force is an interaction between two objects. Thus, forces must come in pairs: Whenever one body exerts a force on a second body, the second exerts a force on the first. Furthermore, the two forces are equal in strength but opposite in direction.

7 4.6 Newton meets the Automobile Resistive Forces: Any force that acts on a moving body in a direction opposite to the body’s motion Rolling Resistance: The resistive force by a surface on a rolling object Rocket Propulsion: When material is ejected from a vehicle, it exerts a reaction force back on the vehicle because of the law of force pairs. This force accelerates the vehicle


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