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I. FORCES I. FORCES

I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

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Page 1: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

I. FORCESI. FORCES

Page 2: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

1. What is a force?1. What is a force?

A lift, push or pull

Page 3: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

2. What is a net force?2. What is a net force?

• The combination of all the forces acting on an object

• Determines whether the velocity of the object will change

• An object accelerates in the direction of the net force

• An object will not accelerate if the net force is zero

Page 4: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

What are the net forces acting on What are the net forces acting on the following?the following?

Page 5: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

3. What are balanced forces?3. What are balanced forces?

• Forces that are equal in size and opposite in direction

• They combine to produce a net force of zero

• No change in motion occurs (no acceleration)

Page 6: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

4. What are unbalanced forces?4. What are unbalanced forces?

• Forces that are unequal

• They cause a change in motion (acceleration)

• Ex: tug of war

Page 7: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

5. How are forces shown?5. How are forces shown?

• Using arrows

• The length of the arrow represents the strength of the force

• The direction of the arrow represents the direction of the force

Page 8: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

Identify whether Identify whether balanced or unbalancedbalanced or unbalanced forces forces are responsible for the following different types of are responsible for the following different types of movement.movement.

• A discus thrown through the air. • A gymnast balanced on a beam.• A sprinter running a bend at a constant speed in

a 200 m race.• A vehicle traveling along a horizontal linear air

track • A car that has a deceleration of 9 m/s2 • A lift traveling downwards at a constant speed of

1m/s.

Page 9: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

6. What is friction?6. What is friction?

• A force between two objects in contact that opposes the motion of the objects

• It will cause a moving object to slow down and eventually stop

• Friction between rough surfaces is greater than friction between smooth surfaces

• Friction is not always bad – some times we need friction (Ex: to walk, to stop a car)

Page 10: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

7. What is air resistance?7. What is air resistance?

• A form of friction caused by air hitting against the surface of a moving object

Page 11: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

8. What is gravity?8. What is gravity?

• The attraction between two particles of matter due to their mass

• Gravity is a force

Page 12: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

9. What is the law of gravitation?9. What is the law of gravitation?

• It states that all objects in the universe attract each other by the force of gravity

• The size of this force of gravity depends on 2 things:

1. The masses of the objects (gravity increases as the masses increases)

2. The distance between the objects (gravity decreases as the distance between the objects increases)

Page 13: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

II. NEWTON’S LAWS OF II. NEWTON’S LAWS OF MOTIONMOTION

Page 14: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

1. Who is Isaac Newton?1. Who is Isaac Newton?

The founder of modern physics

Page 15: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

2. What is Newton’s 12. What is Newton’s 1stst law of law of motion?motion?

• An object at rest remains at rest and an object in motion remains in motion at a constant velocity unless acted upon by an unbalanced force

Page 16: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

3. What are some examples of 3. What are some examples of Newton’s 1Newton’s 1stst law of motion? law of motion?

• Riding in a car and slam on brakes and you continue forward

Page 17: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

4. What is inertia?4. What is inertia?

• The tendency of an object to remain at rest or in motion with a constant velocity

• All objects have inertia because they resist changes in motion

Page 18: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

5. What is Newton’s 25. What is Newton’s 2ndnd law of law of motion?motion?

• An unbalanced force acting on an object equals the object’s mass times its acceleration.

• It describes the effect of unbalanced forces acting on an object

• The greater the force, the greater the acceleration if the mass remains constant

• The greater the mass, the greater the force needed to accelerate an object

Page 19: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

6. What is the formula for Newton’s 6. What is the formula for Newton’s 22ndnd law of motion? law of motion?

Force = mass x acceleration

or

F = ma

Page 20: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

7. What are some examples of 7. What are some examples of Newton’s 2Newton’s 2ndnd law of motion? law of motion?

• Pushing an empty grocery cart vs. pushing a full grocery cart

Page 21: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

8. What unit is used to measure 8. What unit is used to measure force?force?

• Newton

Page 22: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

10. What is weight?10. What is weight?

• A measure of the force of gravity on an object

Page 23: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

11. How can F = ma be used to 11. How can F = ma be used to calculate your weight?calculate your weight?

• Weight = mass x gravitational acceleration

• W = mg

Page 24: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

12. How are weight and mass 12. How are weight and mass different?different?

• Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object

• Weight is a measure of the gravitational force an object experiences due to its mass (so weight depends on gravity)

• An object’s weight changes when gravity changes but mass always stays the same.

Page 25: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

14. What is Newton’s 314. What is Newton’s 3rdrd law of law of motion?motion?

• (law of action and reaction) for every action force, there is an equal and opposite reaction force

• Forces always occur in pairs

• The action/reaction forces act on different objects

Page 26: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

15. What are some examples of 15. What are some examples of Newton’s 3Newton’s 3rdrd law of motion? law of motion?

rocketry

Page 27: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

17. What are 3 types of frictional 17. What are 3 types of frictional forces?forces?

• Sliding friction – occurs when a solid surface slides over another solid surface

• Rolling friction – occurs when an object rolls across a solid surface (rolling friction tends to be less than sliding friction)

• Static friction – occurs between the surfaces of two objects that touch but do not move against each other. To move an object, static friction must be overcome.

Page 28: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

18. What is a net force?18. What is a net force?

• The combination of all the forces acting on an object

• If the net force is zero, no change in movement occurs.

Page 29: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull
Page 30: I. FORCES. 1. What is a force? A lift, push or pull

• The correct answer is A. To determine the net force, you must subtract the two forces since they are in opposite directions:

20 N – 20 N = 0 N.