Physics Finals Reviewer
Physics Finals Reviewer
Physics Finals Reviewer
acting on it
Collisions
3 TYPES
Elastic - collide then move separately with no change in KE
Inelastic - collide then move separately in same direction; final KE is less than initial KE
Perfectly Inelastic - collide and move together as one mass after
Friction
- force that resists motion whenever two materials or media are in contact with each other &
sliding/rolling over each other
- opposing force
Three Types
1) Static - prevents impending motion between two obj; exists when two stationary surfaces tend to
slide over each other
Normal Force (force that presses the surfaces together; always perpendicular to contact
surface)
2) Sliding or Kinetic - two obj are moving against each other; there is relative (sliding) motion
3) Rolling - one rotates as it moves over another but does not slip nor slide
Starting friction - maximum value for static friction
Lubrication - most common method of reducing friction // Alloys - self-lubricating // friction can also
be reduced by using roller bearings or thin film of oil
Rosin bag / sanding icy sidewalks / tire chains & snow tires - increases friction
Coefficient of friction - constant
Actual frictional force - same magnitude as the applied force; opposite direction (when greater than
static ff, motion starts)
Equilibrium
Rigid bodies - obj wherein all parts remain at fixed distances from every other part
Mechanical equilibrium - vector sum of all forces acting on the body is zero and acceleration is zero
Static - at rest
Dynamic - in motion at a constant velocity
Stable - small displacement from equilibrium results in a force that returns obj to orig position //
center of gravity is @ lowest possible position
Unstable - cannot return to orig position
Neutral - can be rolled from one side to another
Center of gravity (cg) - located at the point where it can be suspended w/o tending to rotate
(cg is at center for regular shapes; cg is at thicker end for irregular shapes)
Concurrent forces - forces w/ lines of action through the same point
Torque
- quantity that measures how effectively a force causes a body to rotate; when force is applied w/
leverage
Lever arm - perpendicular distance from the axis of rotation to the line along which the force acts
Circular Motion
Uniform circular motion - motion in a circle at constant speed
*Velocity is always tangent to the circle // tangent - specifies direction of motion
Period - time needed by object in ucm to complete an orbit
Laws of Planetary Motion
Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn - five small bright obj; called 'wandering stars'
Planet - comes from Greek word planetes which means wanderer
Aristotle - earth = center of universe; earth stood still while everything moved around it
Heracleides of Ponticus - earth turned on its axis
Aristarchus of Samos - earth moved around the Sun
Plato - God sheltered man on earth therefore it should be the greatest planet and center of the universe
Claudious Ptolemy - stationary earth = center of universe; all planets moved around it in epicycles
(geocentric theory)
Epicycle - planets move in small cirlces as the move around earth in a larger circle
Geocentric - earth-centered
Nicolaus Copernicus - sun is the center (heliocentric); he presented his ideas in a book (which he
dedicated to Pope Paul III)
Tycho Brahe - built huge protractors to see exact locations of the stars; last great naked-eye
astronomer
Johannes Kepler - Brahe's student; earth is stationary and moon & the sun move around it while other
planets revolve around the sun
Tychonic System - widely used in the 17th century
Copernican System - condemned by the church
Galileo Galilei - invented telescope which made Tycho's methods become instantly superseded;
Kepler handed to him the plantary data to conclude that Copernicus' theory was right
Ellipse - the path that the planets follow
Kepler's laws of planetary motion
1) Law of Ellpises: sun is located on one of the foci
2) Law of Equal Areas: line fom center of sun to center of any planet sweeps out in equal areas
3) Law of Harmonies (periods)
Law of Universal Gravitation
Gravitation - inward force exerted by the sun; keeps the planets in their orbits
Law - every obj attracts every other obj with a force that is directly prop to the product of the masses
of the two obj and inversely prop to the square of the distance bet the centers of the two
Work
- done whenever a force produces movement
SI unit is Joule (J) in honor of James Prescott Joule
Energy
Kinetic Energy - energy possessed by bodies in motion
Potential Energy - stored energy
gravitational PE - lift from ground
elastic PE - stretched, compressed, bent
Different forms - chemical, mechanical, thermal, electrical, radiant, sound
Law of conservation of energy - energy can neither be created nor destroyed, it can only be
transformed from one form to another
GPE - energy obj possesses at a height
EPE - work required to stretch at a distance
Mechanical energy - sum of KE and PE
Power
- rate of doing work
Mechanics of Fluids
Fluid - substane whose shape can easily change and is able to flow
Fluid statics - study of fluids at rest