Title: 1' Lecture
1Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- 1' Lecture
- Newtons Laws of Motion are
- Acceleration (or deceleration) occurs if and
only if there is a net external force.
- a F/m Note this is a vector eqn.
- The force exerted by a first object on a second
is always equal and opposite the the force
exerted by the second on the first. F12 - F21
2Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- 1' Lecture continued (30? more)
- Weight is the force of gravity equal to g times
the mass of the object. - g 9.80 N/kg
- The force of friction is opposed to the motion
of a body and proportional to the normal force. - Free body diagrams are sketches of all the
forces acting on a body.
3Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- Laws of Motion
- 1st Law
- An acceleration is caused by a net external
force.
4Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- 2nd Law of Motion
- a F /m
- Note the vector nature of the equation
- ax Fx /m
- ay Fy /m
5Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- 2nd Law of Motion Implications
- The Newton N
- is the unit of force in SI units.
- F m a
- N kg m/s/s
6Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- 2nd Law of Motion Implications
- Consider free fall (in the absence of air
resistance) - Weight F m g fact 1
- F m a fact 2
- ? m ag m g
- ? ag g
7Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- 2nd Law of Motion Implications
- Feather and Penny Demonstration
8Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- 2nd Law of Motion Implications
- When a sheet of paper and a book are dropped at
the same time, what will happen? - Will (1) the book accelerate faster that the
sheet (2) vice versa or (3) will they each
accelerate at the same rate? Why do you think
so?
9Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- 2nd Law of Motion Implications
- Book and Paper
Book wins!
CDrag v2 Book
CDrag v2 Paper
- gm
aPaper (- gm CDrag v2 Paper) /m
- gM
aBook (- gM CDrag v2 Book)/M
10Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- 2nd Law of Motion Implications
- Book and Paper
Tie!
CDrag v2
- gm
- gM
aBookPaper (- gM - gm CDrag v2)/(Mm)
11Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- 2nd Law of Motion Implications
- Atwood Machine
12Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- 2nd Law of Motion Implications
- Atwood Machine
F g (m2 m1)
a F/(m2 m1)
a g(m2 m1)/(m2 m1)
13Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- 2nd Law of Motion Implications
- How much force is one Newton?
- How much mass weighs 1 N?
- F m g
- 1.00 N mN (9.80 N/kg)
- mN 1.00/ 9.80 kg
- mN 0.102 kg
- Experience Newtons apple
14Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- 2nd Law of Motion Implications
- What acceleration will one Newton produce on a
mass of one kilogram? -
a F /m a 1.00 N /1.00 kg a 1.00 m/s2
m/s2 N /kg
15Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- 2nd Law of Motion Implications
- Mysterious Spool Puzzle
Spool
F ?
?????????
16Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- 2nd Law of Motion Implications
- Mysterious Spool Puzzle
Spool
F ?
a F/m a, always in the direction of F
17Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- Summary
- Newtons Laws of Motion are
- (1) Acceleration (or deceleration) occurs if and
only if there is a net external force. - (2) a F/m Note this is a vector eqn.
- (3) The force exerted by a first object on a
second is always equal and opposite the the force
exerted by the second on the first. F12 - F21
18Physics 1710 Chapter 5 Laws of MotionII
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- Summary (contd.)
- Weight is the force of gravity equal to g times
the mass of the object. - g 9.80 N/kg
- The force of friction is opposed to the motion
of a body and proportional to the normal force. - Free body diagrams are sketches of all the
forces acting on a body.