Title: Welcome back to Physics 211
1Welcome back to Physics 211
- Todays agenda
- More on Newtons Laws
- Free Body Diagrams
2Relationship between Mass, Weight and Gravity
Mass
- scalar quantity that describes an objects
inertia - describes the amount of matter in an object
- intrinsic property of an object
- tells us something about the object, regardless
of where the object is, what its doing, or
whatever forces may be acting on it
3Gravity
Somewhat more loosely, gravity is a force that
acts on mass. When two objects with masses m1 and
m2 are separated by distance r, each object pulls
on the other with a force given by Newtons law
of gravity.
4Gravity cont.
where G 6.67 x 10 -11 Nm2/kg2
near Earth
5Example Problem 41
- Sam, whose mass is 75 kg, takes off across level
snow on his jet-powered skis. The skis have a
thrust of 200 N and a coefficient of kinetic
friction on snow of 0.10. Unfortunately, the skis
run out of fuel after only 10s. - What is Sams top speed?
- How far has Sam traveled when he finally coasts
to a stop?
6Chapter 7. Newtons Third Law
- Topics
- Interacting Objects
- Analyzing Interacting Objects
- Newtons Third Law
- Ropes and Pulleys
- Examples of Interacting-Object Problems
7Interacting Objects
If object A exerts a force on object B, then
object B exerts a force on object A. The pair of
forces, as shown, is called an action/reaction
pair.
8Newtons 3rd Law
9Physics Education Research
fact that a large majority can recite Newtons
third law when they enter the class. Halloun and
Hestenes (1985b) have characterized student
beliefs about interactions in terms of a
dominance principle the larger (or faster or
more active) object exerts a larger force than
the smaller (or slower or less active) object.
Students tend to view an interaction as a
conflict in which the stronger wins. Its not
hard to understand how this common-sense view
comes about. After all, the effect of the
collision on the compact car is much larger than
its effect on the truck.
10- Some of the more specific difficulties students
have with Newtons third law and with interacting
objects are - Students dont believe Newtons third law. Its
too contrary to common sense. - Students have difficulty identifying
action/reaction force pairs - They match two forces on the same object.
- They place forces on the wrong objects.
- They dont believe that long-range forces (e.g.,
gravity) have reaction forces. - Students confuse equal force with equal
acceleration.
11Students dont understand tension
- They think that tension is the sum of the forces
exerted at the two ends of a string. - They think that tension exerts a force only in
the direction of motion. - They think that tension can pass through an
object to another string on the other side. - Students often dont recognize that objects
connected by an inextensible string must have
accelerations of equal magnitude.
12Demos
- Pasco cars
- Equal masses
- Unequal masses
- 1 student cart medicine ball
- 2 students cart rope
13Ropes, pulleys, strings and springs
- Unless otherwise stated, all of these are
massless and frictionless. - These automatically accelerate with the
connecting objects. - These can be ordered from special imaginary
physics equipment catalogs.
14How does the tension in string (a) compare to
that in string (b)?
- Ta gt Tb
- Ta lt Tb
- Ta Tb
- Not enough information
15- T1 gt T2
- T1 lt T2
- T1 T2
- Not enough information
16Block A is held in place. How does the tension in
the section of the string tied to block A compare
to the section tied to block B?
- Ta gt Tb
- Ta lt Tb
- Ta Tb
- Not enough information
17Block A is released. How does the magnitude of
the acceleration of block A compare to that of
block B?
- aa gt ab
- aa lt ab
- aa ab
- Not enough information
18Block A is released. How does the tension in the
string now (T2) compare to the tension (T1) when
block A was held in place?
- T1 gt T2
- T1 lt T2
- T1 T2
- Not enough information
19- Ch.7 32
- The 1 kg. block (m1) is tied to the wall with a
rope. It sits on top of the 2 kg block. The lower
block is pulled to the right with a tension force
of 20 N. The coefficient of kinetic friction at
both the lower and upper surfaces of the 2 kg
block is µk 0.40. - What is the tension in the rope holding m1?
- What is the acceleration of m2?
m1
m2
20Demo Pulleys
2 pulleys 2T W F T W/2
T
F
N pulleys F W/N!
W
21FHW7 Due F 10/16/09
WHW8 Due F 10/21/09
- Ch.6 EP 29, 37, 46 Ch. 7 CQ 12