PS Notes ForceS
PS Notes ForceS
PS Notes ForceS
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Force Notes
Newton’s Laws
So far, we have discussed displacement, velocity, and acceleration (all ways to describe
motion). In this unit we will discuss forces, which explain why objects move.
Free Body Diagram – Drawing that shows all forces acting on an object.
(Object may be represented as a “dot”
4N
3N 6N
Free-body diagrams for four situations are shown below. The net force is known for each situation.
However, the magnitudes of a few of the individual forces are not known. Analyze each situation
individually and determine the magnitude of the unknown forces.
Newton’s Laws of Motion
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Newton’s First Law: An object at rest tends to stay at rest and an object in motion tends
to stay in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by
an unbalanced force.
This is often called the law of inertia. Inertia is the tendency of an object to resist
change in its state of motion (velocity).
Fnet = 0 Fnet ≠ 0
Example: When driving in a car, how do you feel (which way do you lean) when the
car…
Action of Car Passenger Observations Why?
Speeds up
Slows down
Q: So why does a ball rolling along the ground eventually come to a stop? Shouldn’t it
keep going because of inertia?
Try this: Push your textbook across the surface of your desk.
What happens when you stop pushing? Why?
Q: Imagine a place in the cosmos far from all gravitational and frictional influences.
Suppose that you visit that place (just suppose) and throw a rock. The rock will
a. gradually stop.
Objects with greater mass have greater inertia. (Picture the friction created when you push a
Styrofoam brick and a cement brick across the table with equal force.)
What is mass?
- Mass is a measure of the inertia of the object.
- Related to the amount of matter in an object
- Measured in grams, kilograms
Mass and weight are related because the earth pulls more strongly on objects with more
mass, but the numbers are not the same.
Q: What is the weight of a 7.0-kg bowling ball on the surface of the moon (where g=2.6)?
Q: What is the mass of a 7.0-kg bowling ball on the surface of the moon?
Q: Does a 2-kg iron brick have twice as much inertia as a 1-kg iron brick? Twice as
much mass? Twice as much weight? Twice as much volume?
Q: Does a 2-kg iron brick have twice as much inertia as a 1-kg wooden brick? Twice as
much mass? Twice as much weight? Twice as much volume?
Unbalanced forces acting on an object result in acceleration. Newton’s second law tells
us the relationship between the force and the resulting acceleration.
(kg)
(N) (m/s/s)
1. 10 2 ?
2. 20 2 ?
3. 20 4 ?
4. ? 2 5
5. 10 ? 10
Q: What (2) changes result in the acceleration being doubled?
Q: In a physics lab, Kate and Rob use a hanging mass and pulley system to exert a 2.45 N
rightward force on a 0.500-kg cart to accelerate it across a low-friction track. If
the total resistance force to the motion of the cart is 0.72 N, then what is the cart's
acceleration?
2 Types of Friction
1. Sliding (________________) Friction: results when an object slides across a
surface (ex – pushing a box across the floor. The floor surface exerts a friction
force upon the box.)
Ex: you push on a heavy box and it does not move. The static friction force balances
the force you exert on the box and the box remains at rest.
The harder you push an object, the greater the static friction force becomes. (Your push
must = friction if the object is not moving). This is true until the object finally begins
moving, then the friction is kinetic.
Air resistance acts in the direction opposite the object’s motion. (For falling objects, air
resistance pushes __________)
2. Speed of falling object The greater the speed, the more air molecules per
second the object must push through.
An object will only accelerate when the downward force is larger. Since increased speed
= increased drag, the upward force gets bigger and bigger. Eventually, it is the same
magnitude as Fgrav.
Time
2. Fg > Fair
1. Fg > Fair Accelerates more Fg = Fair
Object slowly Net Force = 0, constant speed
accelerates Terminal Velocity Reached
Q: Describe the changing forces acting on a skydiver from the moment they leave the
plane until they reach terminal velocity.
Q: A skydiver jumps from a high-flying helicopter. As she falls faster and faster through
the air, does her acceleration increase, decrease, or remain the same?
Ex: When your book sits on a desk, it doesn’t move. Why? Are the forces balanced or
unbalanced?
Draw a free body diagram of the book. What forces are equal and opposite?
Q: On a cold, rainy day, your car battery is dead and you must push the car to get it
started. Why can’t you push the car by remaining comfortably inside and pushing on the
dashboard?
Q: We know the Earth pulls on the Moon. Does the moon also pull on the Earth?
Newton’s Laws of Motion
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Q: You hit a baseball with a bat. If we call the force exerted on the ball by the bat the
action force, identify the reaction force.
Q: When a rifle fires a bullet, a force pair exists between the bullet and the rifle. The
force exerted on the bullet is equal to the force exerted on the rifle, which is why the rifle
“kicks back” when fired. Why doesn’t the rifle recoil with the same speed as the bullet?
Walking