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Newton

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Newton s First Law of Motion ... Netwon s First Law- Inertia Newton develops his famous laws at the age ... One Kilogram Weighs 9.8 Newtons Weight = mass ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Newton


1
Newtons First Law of MotionInertia
2
Aristotle on Motion
  • Divided motion into 2 types
  • Natural Motion- Motion straight up or down.
    Objects would seek their natural resting places.
    For example A boulder falling toward the ground
    or smoke rising into the clouds.
  • Violent Motion- Motion resulting from forces that
    pushed or pulled. Motion due to some external
    cause. For example Cart pulled by a horse or
    ship pushed by the wind.

3
Aristotle on Motion Continued
  • Aristotle also believed that circular motion was
    natural for the heavens.
  • He believed that the planets and stars moved in
    perfect circles around the earth.
  • Since the motions were natural, they were not
    caused by forces.

4
Copernicus and the Moving Earth
  • Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543) believed that the
    earth and the other planets moved around the sun.
  • Copernicus worked on his ideas in secret in fear
    of persecution.
  • He published his ideas, De Revolutionibus, before
    his death on May 24, 1543.

5
Galileo
  • Galileo was a Italian scientist during the
    late-renaissance.

6
Galileo on Motion
  • Galileo demolished the notion that a force was
    necessary to keep an object moving.
  • Force-Any push or pull
  • Friction-Force that acts between materials that
    touch as they move past each other. If friction
    were absent, a moving object would need no force
    whatever to remain in motion.
  • Galileo argued that only when friction is
    present, is a force needed to keep an object
    moving.

7
Galileo Tests His Idea
  • He tested his idea by rolling balls along plane
    surfaces tilted at different angles.
  • Ball rolling down an inclined plane picks up
    speed and moves in the direction of gravity.
  • Ball rolling up an inclined plane, opposite to
    gravity, loses speed.
  • Ball rolling on a level surface does not roll
    with or against gravity and has almost constant
    velocity. Without friction, the ball would move
    forever with no push or pull required to keep it
    moving.

8
Galileo Supports His Idea With Another Line of
Reasoning
9
Galileo Continued
10
Galileo Comes to a Conclusion
  • Galileo stated that the tendency of a moving body
    to keep moving is natural and that every material
    object resists change to its state of motion.
  • The property of a body to resist change is called
    inertia.

11
Netwons First Law- Inertia
  • Newton develops his famous laws at the age of 24.
  • 1st Law Every object continues in a state of
    rest, or of motion in a straight line at constant
    speed, unless it is compelled to change that
    state by forces exerted upon it.

12
Inertia
13
For Example
  • Dishes on a tablecloth are in a state of rest.
  • They tend to remain at rest, even if you snap the
    tablecloth out from beneath them.

14
Inertia
15
For Example
  • If you slide a hockey puck along the surface of a
    city street, the puck will soon come to rest.
  • If you slide it on the ice, it slides a longer
    distance. (Due to less friction).
  • In the absences of forces, a moving object tends
    to move in a straight line indefinitely!

16
More Examples of Inertia
  • Blood rushes from your head to your feet when
    riding on a descending elevator which suddenly
    stops.
  • The head of a hammer can be tightened onto the
    wooden handle by banging the bottom of the handle
    against a hard surface.
  • To dislodge ketchup from the bottom of a ketchup
    bottle, the bottle is often turned upside down,
    thrust downward at a high speed and then abruptly
    halted.
  • Headrests are placed in cars to prevent whiplash
    injuries during rear-end collisions.
  • While riding a skateboard (or wagon or bicycle),
    you fly forward off the board when hitting a
    curb, a rock or another object which abruptly
    halts the motion of the skateboard.

17
Mass-A Measure of Inertia
  • Kick an empty can and it moves. Kick a can filled
    steel nails and it will not move as much and you
    will hurt your foot.
  • The nail filled can has more inertia that the
    empty can. The amount inertia an object has
    depends on its mass.
  • Mass- the amount of material present in an
    object. If an object has a large mass, it may or
    may not have a large volume.
  • The more mass an object has, the greater its
    inertia and the more force it takes to change its
    state of motion. Mass is the measure of the
    inertia of an object.

18
More Mass Greater Inertia
19
Quiz- Which Has More Inertia?
20
Mass is not Weight!!!
  • Mass the quantity of matter in an object. More
    specifically, mass is a measure of inertia, or
    laziness, that an object exhibits in response
    to any effort made to start it, stop it, or
    change its state of motion. The mass of an object
    is the same whether its on the moon, on earth or
    in space.
  • Weight the force of gravity on an object. An
    objects weight would be very different on the
    moon, on earth or in outer space. On the moon,
    the objects weight would be one-sixth than that
    on earth. In space, the objects weight would be
    zero.

21
One Kilogram Weighs 9.8 Newtons
  • Weight mass acceleration due to gravity. (W
    mg)
  • In the US the unit for weight is pounds. 1-kg bag
    of nails has a weight of 2.2 pounds or 9.8
    Newtons.
  • A Newton is the SI unit for force named after Sir
    Isaac Newton.

22
Net Force
  • Net Force all the forces acting on an object.
  • When you pull with a force of 10 N, the net force
    acting on the object is 10 N.
  • If a friend assists you and pulls in the same
    direction with a force of 5 N, then the net force
    is the sum of the forces or 15 N.
  • If your friend pulls with a force of 5 N in the
    opposite direction, then the net force is the
    difference of the forces, or 5 N.

23
Equilibrium-When Net Force Equals Zero
  • What forces act on your book while it is
    motionless on a table?
  • Normal force- Force perpendicular to surface.
    Often, not always, equals weight of the object.

24
Equilibrium Continued
  • When you hang from a rope, the tension of the
    rope equals your weight. The rope pulls you up
    while gravity pulls you down. Since the forces
    cancel each other out, you are motionless.

25
Vector Addition of Forces
  • The tension is greater in a pair of non- vertical
    spring scales and depends on their angle from the
    vertical.
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