do now! hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

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Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

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Page 1: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Do now!

Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Page 2: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s Laws of Motion

That’s me!

Page 4: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s 1st Law

An object continues in uniform motion in a straight line or at rest unless a resultant external force acts

Does this make sense?

Page 5: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s 1st law

Newton’s first law was actually discovered by Galileo.

Newton nicked it!

Page 6: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s first law

Galileo imagined a marble rolling in a very smooth (i.e. no friction) bowl.

Page 7: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s first lawIf you let go of the ball, it always rolls up the opposite side until it reaches its original height (this actually comes from the conservation of energy).

Page 8: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s first lawNo matter how long the bowl, this always happens

Page 9: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s first lawNo matter how long the bowl, this always happens.

constant velocity

Page 10: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s first lawGalileo imagined an infinitely long bowl where the ball never reaches the other side!

Page 11: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s first lawThe ball travels with constant velocity until its reaches the other side (which it never does!).

Galileo realised that this was the natural state of objects when no (resultant ) forces act.

constant velocity

Page 12: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Other examples

Imagine a (giant) dog falling from a tall building

Page 13: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Other examples

To start the dog is travelling slowly. The main force on the dog is gravity, with a little air resistance

gravity

Air resistance

Page 14: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Other examples

As the dog falls faster, the air resistance increases (note that its weight (force of gravity) stays the same)

gravity

Air resistance

Page 15: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Other examples

Eventually the air resistance grows until it equals the force of gravity. At this time the dog travels with constant velocity (called its terminal velocity)

gravity

Air resistance

Page 16: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Oooops!

Page 17: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Another example

Imagine Mr Porter cycling at constant velocity.

Page 18: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s 1st law

He is providing a pushing force.

Constant velocity

Page 19: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s 1st law

There is an equal and opposite friction force.

Constant velocity

Pushing force

friction

Page 20: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s second law

Newton’s second law concerns examples where there is a resultant force.

I thought of this law myself!

Page 21: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Let’s go back to Mr Porter on his bike.

Remember when the forces are balanced (no resultant force) he travels at constant velocity.

Constant velocity

Pushing force

friction

Page 22: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s 2nd law

Now lets imagine what happens if he pedals faster.

Pushing force

friction

Page 23: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s 2nd law

His velocity changes (goes faster). He accelerates!

Pushing force

friction

acceleration

Remember from last year that acceleration is rate of change of velocity. In other words

acceleration = (change in velocity)/time

Page 24: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s 2nd law

Now imagine what happens if he stops pedalling.

friction

Page 25: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s 2nd law

He slows down (decellerates). This is a negative acceleration.

friction

Page 26: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s 2nd law

So when there is a resultant force, an object accelerates (changes velocity)

Pushing force

friction

Mr Porter’s Porche

Page 27: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s 2nd law

There is a mathematical relationship between the resultant force and acceleration.

Resultant force (N) = mass (kg) x acceleration (m/s2)

FR = maIt’s physics,

there’s always a mathematical relationship!

Page 28: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

An example

What will be Mr Poter’s acceleration?

Pushing force (100 N)

Friction (60 N)

Mass of Mr Porter and bike = 100 kg

Page 29: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

An example

Resultant force = 100 – 60 = 40 N

FR = ma

40 = 100a

a = 0.4 m/s2

Pushing force (100 N)

Friction (60 N)

Mass of Mr Porter and bike = 100 kg

Page 30: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Newton’s 3rd lawIf a body A exerts a force on body B, body B will exert an equal but opposite force on body A.

Hand (body A) exerts force on table (body B)

Table (body B) exerts force on hand (body A)

Page 32: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Free-body diagrams

Page 33: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Free-body diagrams

Shows the magnitude and direction of all forces acting on a single body

The diagram shows the body only and the forces acting on it.

Page 34: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Examples

• Mass hanging on a rope

W (weight)

T (tension in rope)

Page 35: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Examples

• Inclined slope

W (weight)

R (normal reaction force)

F (friction)

If a body touches another body there is a force of reaction or contact force. The force is perpendicular to the body exerting the force

Page 36: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Examples

• String over a pulley

T (tension in rope)

T (tension in rope)

W1

W1

Page 37: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Examples

• Ladder leaning against a wall

R

R

F

F

W

Page 38: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Resolving vectors into components

Page 39: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Resolving vectors into components

It is sometime useful to split vectors into perpendicular components

Page 40: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Resolving vectors into components

Page 41: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

A cable car question

Page 42: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Tension in the cables?

10 000 N

?? 10°

Page 43: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Vertically 10 000 = 2 X ? X sin10°

10 000 N

?? 10°

? X sin10° ? X sin10°

Page 44: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Vertically 10 000/2xsin10° = ?

10 000 N

?? 10°

? X sin10° ? X sin10°

Page 45: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

? = 28 800 N

10 000 N

?? 10°

? X sin10° ? X sin10°

Page 46: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

What happens as the angle deceases?

10 000 N

?? θ? = 10 000/2xsinθ

Page 47: Do now! Hey dudes, can you go through your folders and make sure everything is in order?

Let’s try some questions!

Page 67 Question 2Page 68 Questions 6, 8, 10.Page 73 Questions 3, 4, 5

Page 74 Question 9, 12Page 75 Question 14

Page 84 Questions 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9

Page 85 Questions 13, 16, 20, 21.