Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight...

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Free Body Diagrams

Transcript of Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight...

Page 1: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Free Body Diagrams

Page 2: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Review: Newton’s 1st Law

An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or pull will cause object to speed up, slow down, or change direction.

Page 3: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Basically, objects just keep on doing whatever they are doing unless they are acted upon by an unbalanced force.

Page 4: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Common Examples

• Ketchup stays in the bottom (at rest) until you bang (outside force) on the end of the bottom.

• A headrest in a car prevents whiplash injuries during a rear-end collision ( your head goes forward and then jerks backward).

• Animation 1 – ladder truck• Animation 2 – no seatbelt

Page 5: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Steps to drawing a free body diagram

1.Pick one object to analyze

2.Draw a box to represent the object

3.Draw an arrow to represent each force acting on the object

4.Make sure the arrow shows the direction and relative size of the force

Page 6: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Types of ForcesType Abbreviati

onDefinition

Friction

fric Force opposing motion (sliding, rolling, fluid friction)

Normal

norm the contact force exerted on an object preventing the object to fall; air resistance

Applied

app a force that is applied to an object by a person or another object

Gravity grav the weight of the object; Fgrav = m * g where g = 9.8 N/kg (on Earth) and m = mass (in kg)

Page 7: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Free-body diagrams

Free-body diagrams are used to show the relative magnitude and direction of all forces acting on an object.

Page 8: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

This diagram shows four forces acting upon an object. There aren’t always four forces, For example, there could be one, two, or three forces.

Page 9: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Problem 1

A book is at rest on a table top. Diagram the forces acting on the book.

Page 10: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Problem 1

In this diagram, there are normal and gravitational forces on the book.

Page 11: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Problem 1

The forces are balanced (they cancel each other out)

Page 12: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Problem 2An egg is free-falling from a nest in

a tree. Neglect air resistance. Draw a free-body diagram showing

the forces involved.

Page 13: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Problem 2

Gravity is stronger than the air resistance, so the egg falls.

Page 14: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Problem 3 A rightward force is applied

to a book at rest, in order to move it across a desk. Consider frictional forces. Neglect air resistance. Construct a free-body diagram for the book.

Page 15: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Note the applied force arrow pointing to the right. Notice how friction force points in the opposite direction. Finally, there are still gravity and normal forces involved.

Page 16: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Problem 4

A skydiver is falling with a constant velocity. Consider air resistance. Draw a free-body diagram for the skydiver.

Page 17: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Gravity pulls down on the skydiver, while air resistance pushes up as she falls.

Page 18: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Problem 5A man drags a sled across loosely

packed snow with a rightward acceleration. Draw a free-body diagram of the forces acting on the sled.

Page 19: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

The rightward force arrow points to the right. Friction slows his progress and pulls in the opposite direction. Since there is not information that we are in a blizzard, normal forces still apply as does gravitational force since we are on planet Earth.

Page 20: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Problem 6A car runs out of gas and coasts to a stop on flat ground. Draw a free body diagram of the forces acting on the car.

Page 21: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

There is the dragging friction of the road (left pointing arrow) as well as gravity and normal forces.

Page 22: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Net ForceNow let’s take a look at what

happens when unbalanced forces do not become completely balanced (or cancelled) by other individual forces.

An unbalanced forces exists when the vertical and horizontal forces do not cancel each other out.

Page 23: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Example 1Notice the upward force of 1200 Newtons (N) is more than gravity (800 N). The net force is 400 N up.

Page 24: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Example 2Notice that while the normal force and gravitation forces are balanced (each are 50 N) the force of friction results in unbalanced force on the horizontal axis. The net force is 20 N left.

Page 25: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.

Another way to look at balances and unbalanced forces

Page 26: Free Body Diagrams. Review: Newton’s 1 st Law An object in motion stays in motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by unbalanced force. A push or.