Title: Review
1Review
2http//astro.temple.edu/elenab/
3Describing MotionKinematics in one dimension
Kinematics is a part of mechanics, which is the
description of how objects move.
4Speed
Speed is a measure of how fast object moves,
measured by a unit of distance divided by a unit
of time.
5Instantaneous Speed
Average speed doesnt indicate the different
speeds that may have taken place during shorter
time intervals.
6Average Speed
average speed total distance traveled/ time
elapsed Total distance traveled average speed
X time
7- What is the average speed of a cheetah that
sprints 100 m in 4 s? How about if it sprints 50
m in 2 s? - If a car moves with an average speed of 60 km/h
for an hour, it will travel a distance of 60 km. - (a) how far would it travel if it moved at
this rate for 4 h? - (b) for 10 h?
- 3. In addition to speedometer on the dashboard of
every car is an odometer, which records the
distance traveled. If the initial reading is set
at zero at the beginning of a trip and the
reading is 40 km one half hour later, what has
been your average speed? - 4. Would it be possible to attain the average
speed in previous example and never go faster
than 80 km/h?
8Velocity
When we describe speed and the direction of
motion, we are specifying velocity
9- With what two physical values is the race-car
driver concerned? Speed or velocity? - The speedometer of a car moving to the east reads
100 km/h. It passes another car that moves to the
west at 100 km/h. Do both cars have the same
speed? Do they have the same velocity? - During certain period of time, the speedometer of
a car reads a constant 60 km/h. Does this
indicate a constant speed or a constant velocity?
10- How might you estimate your speed if the
speedometer in your car is broken? - 2. Which of the following can be used to measure
an average speed stopwatch, odometer, or
speedometer? An instantaneous speed?
11Acceleration
12We can change the velocity of something by
changing its speed by changing its direction or
by changing its speed and its direction.
13Motion at Constant Acceleration
Acceleration is a rate of change , or change per
second of velocity. v at
14- Which has the greater acceleration, an airplane
that goes from 1000 km/h to 1005 km/h in 10 s, or
a skateboard that goes from 0 to 5 km/h in 1 sec? - What is the acceleration of a race car that
whizzes past you at a constant velocity 400 km/h?
15Acceleration on Galileo Inclined Planes
Galileo found greater accelerations for steeper
inclines. The ball attains max acceleration when
the incline is tipped vertically.
16- a ball rolling down an inclined plane is moving
with constant acceleration - greater accelerations for steeper planes, max
acceleration when incline is tipped vertically - regardless of weight and size, when air
resistance is small enough to be neglected, all
objects fall with the same unchanging
acceleration.
17We call this acceleration the acceleration due to
gravity on the Earth, and we give it the symbol
g. g 9.80 m/ s2 10 m/ s2
18How Far?
With his inclined planes Galileo found that the
distance a uniformly accelerating object travels
is proportional to the square of the
time Distance acceleration x time x time /2.
19At a given location on the Earth and in the
absence of air resistance, all objects fall with
the same constant acceleration
20- Which of the following (if any) could not be
considered an accelerator in an automobile gas
pedal, brake pedal, steering wheel? - A sports car accelerates from 65 mph to 75 mph in
2 seconds while a minivan accelerates from 20 mph
to 35 mph in 2 seconds. Which one has the larger
acceleration? - You are standing on a high cliff above the ocean.
You drop a pebble, and it strikes the water 4
seconds later. Ignoring the effects of air
resistance, how fast was the pebble traveling
just before striking the water? What is the
height of the cliff?
21Explaining Motion
22Galileos inclined planes revisited
Slope upward speed decreases
Slope downward speed increases
No slope. Does speed change?
23Initial
Final position
Where is the final position?
24Newtons first law of motion
The first law incorporates Galileos idea of
inertia and introduces a new concept, force.
25Every object continues in its state of rest, or
of uniform motion in a straight line, unless it
is compelled to change the state by forces
impressed upon it.
26Examples
- Assume that you are pushing car across a level
parking lot. When you are stop pushing, the car
comes to stop. Does this violate Newtons first
law? Why? - Why does a tassel hanging from the rearview
mirror appear to swing forward as you apply the
brakes?
27 If you were traveling toward a distant star and
you ran out of fuel, would your spaceship slow
down and stop? Explain.
28Addition of Vectors Graphical Methods
29Examples
- In everyday use, inertia means that something is
hard to get moving. Is this the only meaning it
has in physics? If not, what other meaning does
it have? - How would you determine that two objects have the
same inertia? - When a number of different forces act on an
object, is the net force necessarily in the same
direction as one of the individual forces? Why? - Modern cars are required to have headrests to
protect your neck during collisions. For what
type of collision are these headrests most
effective?
30Newtons Second Law
The net force on an object is equal to its mass
times its acceleration and points in the
direction of acceleration Fnet ma
31Examples
- Forces of 4 N and 6 N act on the object. What is
the minimum value for the sum of these two
forces? - Two ropes are being used to pull a car out of a
ditch. Each rope exerts a force of 700 N on the
car. Is it possible for the sum of these two
forces to have a magnitude of 1000N? Explain your
reasoning. - If the net force on a boat is directed due east,
what is the direction of the acceleration of the
boat? Would your answer change if the boat had a
velocity due north but the net force still acted
to the east?
32Examples
- Describe the force(s) that allow you to walk
across the room. - You are analyzing a problem in which two forces
act on an object. A 200 N force pulls to the
right, and a 40 N force pulls to the left. Your
classmate asserts that the net force is 200 N
because that is the dominant force that is
acting. What is wrong with that assertion?
33Net Force
The combination of forces that act on the object
is the net force
34Units of Force
1 newton (N) 1 Kg m/s2
35- You push on a crate that sits on a smooth floor
and it accelerates. If you apply four times the
pushing force, how much greater will be the
acceleration? - Same for a rough surface.
36Friction
If you apply a force to an object, a force of
friction usually reduces the net force and
resulting acceleration. The direction of
friction force is always in the direction
opposing motion. The force of dry friction
between solid surfaces doesnt depend on speed or
area of contact.
37Question
- A jumbo jet cruises at constant velocity of 1000
km/h when the thrusting force of its engines is
constant 100000 N. - What is the acceleration of the jet?
- What is the force resistance on the jet?
38Mass and Force of Gravity
Mass The quantity of matter in an object. It is
also the measure of the inertia or sluggishness,
that an object exhibits in response to any effort
made to start it, stop it, or change its state
of motion in any way. Force of Gravity mg
39Newtons Second Law
The net force on an object is equal to its mass
times its acceleration and points in the
direction of acceleration Fnet ma
40Important acceleration of a body is always in
the direction of net force!!!!
41Free-body diagrams
42Free fall revisited
43When Acceleration is Less Than g Nonfree Fall
44Examples
- Forces of 4 N and 6 N act on the object. What is
the minimum value for the sum of these two
forces? - Two ropes are being used to pull a car out of a
ditch. Each rope exerts a force of 700 N on the
car. Is it possible for the sum of these two
forces to have a magnitude of 1000N? Explain your
reasoning. - If the net force on a boat is directed due east,
what is the direction of the acceleration of the
boat? Would your answer change if the boat had a
velocity due north but the net force still acted
to the east?
45Newtons Third Law of MotionForces and
Interactions
46In a broader sense, a force is not a thing in
itself but makes up an interaction between one
thing and another.
47Newtons Third Law of Motion
Whenever one object exerts a force on a second
object, the second exerts equal and opposite
force on the first. On every action there is
equal and opposite reaction
48Which force we call action and which we call
reaction doesnt matter. The point is that
neither exists without the other.
49Action and Reaction on Different Masses
50- A car accelerates along a road. Identify the
force that moves the car. - A high speed bus and an innocent bug have a
head-on collision. The force of impact splatters
the poor bug over the windshield. Is the
corresponding force that bug exerts against the
windshield greater, less or the same? Is the
resulting acceleration of the bus greater than,
less than or the same as that of the bug?
51- A skier is skiing down a steep slope, traveling
at constant speed (that is, the skier has reached
terminal velocity). What are the size and
direction of the net force on the skier? - A car can accelerate at 2 meters per second per
second when towing an identical car. What will
its acceleration be if the towrope breaks? - If the number of different forces act on the
object, is the net force necessarily in the same
direction as one of the individual forces?
52- You apply a 75 N force to pull a childs wagon
across the floor at constant speed. If you
increase your pull to 80 N, will the wagon speed
up to some new constant speed, or will it
continue to speed up indefinitely? Explain your
reasoning. - You are riding an elevator from your tenth-floor
apartment to the parking garage in the basement.
As you approach the garage, the elevator begins
to slow. What is the direction of the net force
on you?
53- If the force exerted by a horse on a cart is
equal and opposite to the force exerted by a cart
on the horse, as required by Newtons third law,
how does the horse manage to move a cart? - A soft-drink sits at rest on a table. Which of
the Newtons laws explains why the upward force
of the table acting on the can is equal and
opposite to Earths gravitational force pulling
down on the can? - A book sits at rest on a table. Which force does
Newtons third law tell us is equal and opposite
to the gravitational force acting on the book?
54Circular Motion
An object moving along a circular path at a
constant speed must have a net force acting on
it.
55It is important to distinguish between adjectives
centripetal (center-seeking) and centrifugal
(center-fleeing). The force, we are discussing ,
the centripetal force, is directed toward the
center of the circle.
56A Car, Rounding a Curve
57Velocity and acceleration are perpendicular each
other at each point of this circle.
58Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion
S F ma m V2/R
Centripetal force is just a term, which means
that there is the acceleration pointed to the
center.
59Projectile Motion
60When something is thrown or launched near the
Earth surface, it experiences a constant
vertical gravitational force. Motion under these
conditions is called projectile motion.
61Important The study of projectile motion is
simplified because the motion can be treated as
two mutually independent, perpendicular motions,
one horizontal and the other vertical.
62Question
Suppose a bullet is fired horizontally from a
pistol and simultaneously another bullet is
dropped from the same height. Which bullet hits
the ground first?
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64ImportantThe object projected horizontally will
reach the ground in the same time as the object
released vertically from the rest.
65Fast Moving Projectiles Satellites
The Earth satellite is simply a projectile that
falls around the Earth rather than into it.
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67Question
A newspaper report reads in part, The space
shuttle orbits Earth at an altitude of nearly 200
miles and is traveling at a speed of 18,000 mph.
The shuttle remains in orbit because the
gravitational force pulling it toward Earth is
balanced by the centrifugal force (the force of
inertia) that is pulling it away from Earth.
Explain why this newspaper should hire a new
reporter.
68Questions
- What is the force that allows a person on
roller-blades to turn a corner? What happens if
this force is not strong enough? - A child rides on a carousel at constant speed. In
which direction does each of the following
vectors point? - a. velocity
- b. change in velocity
- c. acceleration
- d. net force.
69Questions
A vine is just strong to support Tarzan when he
is hanging straight down. However, when he tries
to swing from tree to tree, the same vine breaks
at the bottom of the swing. How could it happen?