AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net...

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AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion

Transcript of AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net...

Page 1: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

AP Physics Chapter 4Force and Motion

Page 2: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Chapter 4: Force and Motion

4.1 The Concepts of Force and Net Force4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion4.4 Newton’s Third Law of Motion4.5 Free-body Diagrams and Translational

Equilibrium4.6 Friction

Page 3: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Homework for Chapter 4• Read Chapter 4

• HW 4A: pp. 131-132: 13, 22, 34, 35, 43, 44.

• HW 4B: pp. 132-134: 46-48, 51-53, 56-59, 64.

• HW 4C: pp. 135-136: 76-78, 80, 83, 85, 88.

Page 4: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.1 The Concepts of Force and Net Force

dynamics – what causes motion and changes in motion.• Isaac Newton summarized the “why” of motion with three laws.

force – something capable of changing an object’s state of motion (its velocity) • a vector quantity • SI unit is the newton • A newton of force causes a 1 kg mass to accelerate 1 m/s2. • 1 N = 1kg · m

s2

net force – the vector sum, or resultant, of all the forces acting on an object. • can be written as ∑ F • balanced forces create zero net force • unbalanced forces create a net force • a net force produces an acceleration

Page 5: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.1 The Concepts of Force and Net Force

Page 6: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.1 The Concepts of Force and Net Force

Page 7: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion

Page 8: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion

Page 9: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion

inertia – the natural tendency of an object to maintain a state of rest or to remain in uniform motion in a straight line (constant velocity).

inertial frame of reference – a non-accelerating frame of reference.- a frame of reference where Newton’s 1st Law holds.ex: juggling on a bus travelling at constant velocity.

non-inertial frame of reference – an accelerating frame of reference where fictitious forces arise.

ex: having to hang on to a merry-go-round, or be thrown off!

mass – a measure of inertia

** If the net force acting on an object is zero, then its acceleration is zero.***

Page 10: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion

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4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion

Page 12: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

Page 13: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

Page 14: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

Page 15: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

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4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

Page 17: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

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4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

Page 19: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

Page 20: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

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4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

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4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

Page 23: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

Page 24: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

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4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

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4.4 Newton’s Third Law of Motion

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4.4 Newton’s Third Law of Motion

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4.4 Newton’s Third Law of Motion

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4.4 Newton’s Third Law of Motion

Page 30: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.4 Newton’s Third Law of Motion

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4.4 Newton’s Third Law of Motion

Page 32: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Check for Understanding

Fill in the blanks using the word bank.

velocity mass dynamics weight “the same”acceleration non-inertial kinematics inertial different

1._________________is used to analyze motion, but ________________ explains what causes motion and changes in motion.

2.A(n)_____________ frame of reference is non-accelerating.

3.In a(n) ________________ frame of reference, fictitious forces arise.

4.The gravitational force on an object near Earth’s surface is called ________.

5.With no forces acting upon it, an object moves with constant ____________.

6.In an action/reaction pair, both forces must act on __________ object(s).

Page 33: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Check for Understanding

Fill in the blanks using the word bank.

velocity mass dynamics weight “the same”acceleration non-inertial kinematics inertial different

1.Kinematics is used to analyze motion, but dynamics explains what causes motion and changes in motion.

2.A(n) inertial frame of reference is non-accelerating.

3.In a(n) non-inertial frame of reference, fictitious forces arise.

4.The gravitational force on an object near Earth’s surface is called weight.

5.With no forces acting upon it, an object moves with constant velocity.

6.In an action/reaction pair, both forces must act on different object(s).

Page 34: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Homework 4ACovers Sections 4.1-4.4: Newton’s Laws

• HW 4A: pp. 131-132: 13, 22, 34, 35, 43, 44.

Page 35: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Lesson 4.5: Free Body Diagrams and Translational Equilibrium

Page 36: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Fground on car

Fgravity

FforwardFresistance

Page 37: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.5 Free-body Diagrams and Translational Equilibrium

Free-body Diagrams

1. Sketch the problem. Draw all force vectors.

2. Pick the body to be analyzed using a free-body diagram. Draw a dot at the center of this body. Draw the origin of your x-y axes at this point. Draw one of the axes along the direction of the body’s acceleration.

3. Draw and label all force vectors acting on the body with their tails on the dot. If the body is accelerating, draw an acceleration vector.

4. Resolve any forces not directed along an x or y axis into their components.

5. Use Newton’s second law to write equations for the x and y directions. Solve!

Problems we will solve will generally have constant forces and therefore have constant accelerations. This allows us to use the kinematics equations and Newton’s Laws to analyze motion.

Page 38: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.5 Free-body Diagrams and Translational Equilibrium

Page 39: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Solution:

Isolate the body which we wish to analyze and draw a free-body diagram.

T = tension holding up scale a = 20 m/s2

(this is what the scale will read) F.B.D. of spring scale

weight = mg Fnet = T – mg

and, Fnet = ma

So, ma = T – mg

Solve for T:T = ma + mg = m (a + g) = 100 kg (20 m/s2 + 10 m/s2)T = 3000 N, which is what the scale will read. The answer is d.

Page 40: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Example 4.5:

Page 41: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.5 Free-body Diagrams and Translational Equilibrium

Pulley Problems• a string is considered massless for our purposes• the tension is the same everywhere in a string• a single, fixed pulley simply changes the direction of a force

Atwood’s Machine• The acceleration of an object depends on the net applied and the object’s mass. • In an Atwood’s Machine, the difference in weight between two hanging masses determines the net force acting on both masses.• This net force accelerates both hanging masses; the heavier mass is accelerated downward, and the lighter mass is accelerated upward.

Page 42: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Example 60:

An Atwood machine has suspended masses of 0.25 kg and 0.20 kg. Under ideal conditions, what will be the acceleration of the smaller mass?

Page 43: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.5 Free-body Diagrams and Translational Equilibrium

Inclined Plane Problems

Suppose we have a mass being accelerated by a rope up a frictionless inclined plane.

1. Make a sketch. Identify the forces acting on the mass. Here we have identified tension, weight, and the normal force.

2. Free-body diagram the mass. Draw a dot to represent the center of mass. Establish the x-axis along the plane, where positive is the direction of acceleration. The y-axis is perpendicular to the x-axis.

Page 44: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

3. Draw force vectors in the proper directions pointing away from the dot. Draw an acceleration vector in the direction of the net force.

4. Resolve any forces that are not directed along the x or y axes into x or y components. Typically you will need to do this for the weight vector.

Use the free-body diagram to analyze the forces in terms of Newton’s second law of motion.

Page 45: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Example 4.6:

Page 46: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Example 65:In the ideal setup shown, m1 = 3.0 kg, m2 = 2.5 kg.a)What is the acceleration of the masses?b)What is the tension in the string?

Page 47: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.5 Free-body Diagrams and Translational Equilibrium

translational equilibrium – the object is at rest or constant velocity• the sum of the forces, Fnet = 0• a = 0

static translational equilibrium – the object is at rest; v = 0 m/s.

Hints for Static Equilibrium Problems • Remember, tension in a string is the same everywhere in the string. • Resolve force vectors into their components. • Sum x and y components separately. • Fnet = 0 for the x and y components

Page 48: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.5 Free-body Diagrams and Translational Equilibrium

Page 49: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.5 Free-body Diagrams and Translational Equilibrium

Page 50: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Check for Understanding: Practice Problem

A 2-kg block and a 5-kg block are shown. The surface is frictionless. Find the tension in the rope connecting the two blocks.

5 kg

2 kgSolution: Draw free-body diagrams of both masses.

m = 2 kg

mg

T

Fnet y = - T + mg = ma

a y+M = 5 kg

Mg

FN

T

Fnet x = T = Ma

ax+

We have two equations and two unknowns, so we can solve it…

Page 51: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Check for Understanding: Practice Problem

Equation 1: T = MaEquation 2: - T + mg = ma

Substitute Equation 1 into Equation 2:- Ma + mg = ma

Solve for a: a mg = ma + Ma mg = a (m + M) a = mg = (2 kg)(9.8 m/s2) = 2.8 m/s2

(m + M) 7 kg

So, T = Ma = (5 kg)(2.8 m/s2) = 14 N

Page 52: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Check for Understanding: Practice Problem 1

Page 53: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Check for Understanding: Practice Problem 1

Page 54: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Homework 4.B(Section 4.5)

• HW 4B : pp. 132-134: 46-48, 51-53, 56-59, 64.

Page 55: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Lesson 4.6: Friction

Page 56: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Warmup: Newton’s Influence

Physics Daily Warmup, # 40

Isaac Newton (1642 – 1727) had a tremendous influence on our understanding of the rules by which nature behaves. He was the first to mathematically describe the universal nature of gravity and the effect of forces on motion, and to realize that white light is composed of separate colors. Along the way, he developed calculus to describe his findings mathematically.

In 1730, the poet Alexander Pope wrote the following epitaph for Isaac Newton:

Nature and Nature’s laws lay hid in night;

God said, Let Newton be! and all was light.

Write a paragraph explaining why you think Pope gave Newton this tribute.

Page 57: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.6 Friction

friction – resistance to motion that occurs whenever two materials, or media, are in contact with each other.• air resistance is a form of friction

• Sometimes we want to increase friction. (ex: cinder an icy road)• Other times we want to reduce friction. (ex: change your oil)

• For ordinary solids, friction is caused mostly by local adhesion between the high spots, or asperities, of contacting surfaces (particularly metals).• When the contacting surfaces move against one another, the asperities of the harder material “plow” through the softer material.

The types of friction are: • static friction – the force of friction that prevents sliding. Static friction is often responsible for movement. example: walking on ice vs. the floor. Static friction acts in the direction of movement. • kinetic (sliding) friction – there is relative motion at the surfaces in contact. Kinetic friction acts opposite the direction of movement.

• rolling friction – one surface rotates as it moves over another surface but does not slip or slide at the point or area of contact

Page 58: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.5 Friction

Page 59: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.5 Friction

Page 60: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.5 Friction

Example: Find the magnitude of P, the force exerted on this box, necessary to keep the box moving at a constant velocity.

P37° 15 kg

µ = .36

Solution:Draw a free-body diagram. Hint: Never draw a force vector pointing into an

object, even when something is pushing. FN

P

mg

Ff

FN

Pymg

PxFf

Break P into x and y components.

Page 61: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.5 Friction

The problem states the box will be moving at constant velocity. This means Fnet = 0. µ = .36, m= 15 kg, Ө = 37°. Also Ff = µ FN

Equations for the vertical direction: FN – mg – Py = 0 ; Py = P sin Ө

Equations for the horizontal direction: Ff – Px = 0 ; Px = P cos Ө

Reduce the number of variables by rewriting the equation for the horizontal forces as µ FN - P cos 37° = 0

Use the vertical equation to substitute for FN : FN = mg + P sin 37°

µ (mg + P sin 37°) - P cos 37° = 0µ mg + µ P sin 37° - P cos 37° = 0P (µ sin 37° - cos 37°) = - µ mgP = - µ mg_______ µ sin 37° - cos 37°P = 91 N

Page 62: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

4.5 Friction

A 150 N box sits motionless on an inclined plane as shown above. What is the maximum angle of the incline before the block starts to slide?

150 N

= 0.25

Page 63: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Check for Understanding

Fill in the blanks using the word bank.

cos Ө kinetic dynamic “opposite to”sin Ө static coefficient “along with”

1._________________friction occurs when two objects are in contact but not moving.

2._____________ friction occurs when two objects are rubbing against each other.

3.Mu is the ________________ of friction.

4.The force of friction is ________ the direction of motion.

5.For an object on an inclined plane, the parallel component of weight is mg __________.

6. For an object on an inclined plane, the perpendicular component of weight is mg __________.

Page 64: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Check for Understanding

Fill in the blanks using the word bank.

cos Ө kinetic dynamic “opposite to”sin Ө static coefficient “along with”

1.Static friction occurs when two objects are in contact but not moving.

2.Kinetic friction occurs when two objects are rubbing against each other.

3.Mu is the coefficient of friction.

4.The force of friction is opposite to the direction of motion.

5.For an object on an inclined plane, the parallel component of weight is mg sin Ө.

6. For an object on an inclined plane, the perpendicular component of weight is mg cos Ө.

Page 65: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Homework 4CCovers Section 4.6: Friction

• HW 4C: pp. 135-136: 76-78, 80, 83, 85, 88.

Page 66: AP Physics Chapter 4 Force and Motion. Chapter 4: Force and Motion 4.1The Concepts of Force and Net Force 4.2 Inertia and Newton’s First Law of Motion.

Formulas for Chapter 4