What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion...

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Transcript of What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion...

Page 1: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:
Page 2: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

What is Motion?Motion: A change in position of an

object compared to a reference point

Motion involves all of the following:

Page 3: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

What is Motion?

SpeedThe rate of change in position

Speed = distance ÷ time or

= distance time

Page 4: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

What is Motion?

VelocitySpeed plus direction

Example: 50 km/hour north

Page 5: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:
Page 6: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

What is Motion?

AccelerationThe rate of change in velocityPositive acceleration = speeding up

Negative acceleration = slowing down (decelerate)

Acceleration = Vfinal – Vinitial

Timeor = ∆Velocity

Time

Page 7: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Motion Questions

1) What units are used to measure speed?

2) What units are used to measure acceleration?

3) What is another way to say “slowing down” in terms of acceleration?

Page 8: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Answer this in the “In” for Forces

• Name 3 forces off the top of your head.

Page 9: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

FORCE = Any push or pull which causes something to move or change its speed or direction

What is a Force?

Page 10: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Forces can be BALANCED or UNBALANCED

Balanced forces are equal in size and opposite in direction

What is a Force?

Net Force = 0.

Balanced forces result in no movement.

Arrow thickness is equal.

Page 11: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Forces can be BALANCED or UNBALANCED

Unbalanced forces in the same direction

What is a Force?

Net Force =

When two forces act in the same direction, the net force is the sum of the two individual forces. Box moves right

Arrow thickness is not equal.

Page 12: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Forces can be BALANCED or UNBALANCED

Unbalanced forces are not equal in size and/or opposite in direction. If the forces on an object are UNBALANCED, we say a NET force results.

What is a Force?

Net force =

Box moves right.

Page 13: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:
Page 14: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

“Out” Force Questions

1) What famous physicist are units of force named after?

2) If Moby has a mass of 50 kg and Tim has a mass of 40 kg, who would require more force to move?

Page 15: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Gravity and Friction

• New Cornell notes (in, out, through) for gravity and friction.

Page 16: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

In For Gravity and Friction

• Does a person have gravity?

Page 17: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

GRAVITYGRAVITY: An attraction force between all masses

Newton’s universal law of gravitationNewton’s universal law of gravitation: Every object in the universe exerts a gravitational attraction to all other objects in the universe

The amount of gravitational force depends upon the mass of the objects and the distance between the objects

What is Gravity?

Page 18: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

The greater the mass, the greater the forceforce

The greater the distancedistance, the lessless the force

Acceleration due to gravity = 9.8 m/s/s or 9.8 m/s2

What is Gravity?

Page 19: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Weight is a measure of the gravitational force between two objects

The greater the mass the greater the force (weight)

Measured in units called Newtons (N)In the standard system units are

pounds (lbs)

What is Weight?

Page 20: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

“Out” Gravity Questions

1) How does the gravity on the moon compare to the gravity on Earth?

2) Why don’t you notice your own gravitational pull on the Earth?

3) On what two things does the force of gravity depend?

Page 21: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

What is Friction?Friction = A force that opposes or slows

down motionCaused by the physical contact

between moving surfacesThe amount of friction depends upon 2

things: 1.) kinds of surfaces and 2.) force pressing the surfaces together

Changes motion into heat

Page 22: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

What is Friction?4 Types of Friction:

1. Rolling Friction (bike tire on the road)

2. Sliding Friction (book sliding on table)

3. Fluid Friction (object moving through air or water)

4. Static Friction (force holding things still)

Page 23: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Air resistance: The force of air exerted on a falling object

The air pushes up as gravity pulls downDependent upon the shape and surface area

of the objectWhen the air resistance equals the force of

gravity, terminal velocity is reachedTerminal velocity is the highest velocity that

an object will reach as it falls

Page 24: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

The feather reaches terminal velocity quickly. Air resistance and gravity cancel each other out so the feather stops accelerating. The elephant keeps accelerating due to its shape, surface area and mass.

Page 25: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

An Elephant and a Feather both fall at the same rate when air is removed (vacuum).

Apollo astronauts dropped a feather and a hammer during their lunar experiments. Both landed at the same time.

Page 26: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Examples of Friction?

What are some ways athletes use friction?

Page 27: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Friction and Gravity “Out” Activity.

Page 28: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:
Page 29: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

First Law: An object at rest stays at rest or an object in motion, stays in motion (in the same direction/at the same speed) unless acted upon by an unbalanced force

Also called the law of inertia

Page 30: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Inertia is: Inertia is: A property of matterThe tendency of an object to resist any

change in its motionThe greater the mass the greater the inertiaThe greater the speed the greater the inertia

Page 31: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Examples of Newton’s 1st Law

a) car suddenly stops and you strain against the seat belt b) when riding a horse, the horse suddenly stops and you fly over its head c) the magician pulls the tablecloth out from under a table full of dishes d) the difficulty of pushing a dead car f) car turns left and you appear to slide to the right

Page 32: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:
Page 33: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Second law: The greater the force applied to an object, the more the object will accelerate. It takes more force to accelerate an object with a lot of mass than to accelerate something with very little mass.

The player in black had more acceleration thus he hit with a

greater amount of force

Page 34: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Second law:The greater the force, the greater the accelerationThe greater the mass, the greater the force needed

for the same accelerationCalculated by: F = ma (F = force, m = mass, a = acceleration)

Page 35: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Examples of Newton’s 2nd Law

a) hitting a baseball, the harder the hit, the faster the ball goes b) accelerating or decelerating a car c) The positioning of football players - massive players on the line with lighter (faster to accelerate) players in the backfield d) a loaded versus an unloaded truck

Page 36: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Examples of Newton’s 2nd Law

The second law states that unbalanced forces cause objects to accelerate with an acceleration which is directly proportional to the net force and inversely proportional to the mass. This one is telling us that big heavy objects don’t move as fast or as easily as smaller lighter objects. It takes more to slow down a charging bull then to slow down a charging mouse.

Page 37: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

“In” Activity

How can climbing into a boat from a dock be used to explain Newton’s 3rd Law?

Page 38: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

third law: For every action force, there is an equal and opposite reaction force. (Forces are always paired)

Page 39: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:
Page 40: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Examples of Newton’s 3rd Law

a)rockets leaving earthb)guns being firedc) two cars hit head on d) astronauts in space e) pool or billiards f) jumping out of a boat onto

the dock

Page 41: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Examples of Newton’s 3rd Law

Page 42: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Examples of Newton’s 3rd Law

Page 43: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Momentum: The quantity of motion A property of moving objects Calculated by: P = mv (p = momentum, m = mass, v = velocity)

• Calculating Momentum

• Momentum Practice

Page 44: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Momentum: The quantity of motion Law of conservation of momentumLaw of conservation of momentum: the total

amount of momentum of a group of objects does not change unless outside forces act on the objects

This is an Inelastic collision. Notice how there is no bounce.

The Diesel engine’s momentum before the collision is _________

The Diesel engine + the flat car momentum after the collision is _________.

No momentum was lost or gained.

Page 45: What is Motion? Motion: A change in position of an object compared to a reference point Motion involves all of the following:

Newton’s Laws Out Activity

1) Why does a ball roll across a rug and come to a stop?

2) What is a net force?

3) Give an example of Newton’s 3rd Law: