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Newton

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Use the 1st and 2nd laws of motion to explain why the penny did not move away with the card when the card was flicked away? 3. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Newton


1
Newtons First and Second Laws of Motion,
Inertia, Mass, Volume, Weight, centripetal force
and rotational inertia.
  • Stations 1-7

2
Station 1 Cup and pennies with card
  • 1. How does the law of inertia apply to this
    activity? What type of equilibrium does this
    illustrate?
  • 2. Use the 1st and 2nd laws of motion to explain
    why the penny did not move away with the card
    when the card was flicked away?
  • 3. Predict what would happen if the index card
    was replaced with sandpaper? How could the 1st
    and 2nd laws of motion to explain.

3
Station 1
  • 1. The penny at rest stays at rest due to its
    inertia. This illustrates static equilibrium.
  • The penny resists any change in velocity unless
    it receives an unbalanced force (1st law).
    Acceleration of the penny did not occur because
    the net force acting horizontally on the penny
    was essentially equal to zero (2nd law).
  • Sandpaper would increase the friction force on
    the penny, which could provide an unbalanced
    force greater than zero (2nd law) that could
    cause the penny to be accelerated and overcome
    inertia (1st law).

4
34. Tim practices a demonstration before doing it
for Sunday dinner. What concept is he
illustrating, and why is he careful not to pull
the tablecloth slightly upward?
  • He is demonstrating the law of inertia (objects
    at rest stay at rest unless receiving an
    unbalanced force). Pulling upward would lift the
    plates and cause them to be unbalanced.

5
Station 2 Air Track Questions
  • 1. What force is removed from the track when the
    positive air supply is turned on?
  • 2. Describe the motion of the sled in one
    direction when it is pushed with the air supply
    turned on.
  • 3. How do Newtons first and second laws of
    motion apply to the air track and sled?
  • 4. As more mass is added to the sled, what
    happens to the sleds inertia?
  • 5. If the air track was one mile long, describe
    the sleds motion after receiving a push. Would
    it require a force to keep moving? What type of
    equilibrium does this demostrate?

6
Station 2
  • Friction is removed.
  • The sled on the air track demonstrates that an
    object in motion will continue moving with
    constant velocity until an unbalanced force
    changes the velocity.
  • Objects in motion stay at a constant velocity
    unless acted upon by an unbalanced force (1st
    law). The sled does not receive an unbalanced
    force until making impact with the bumper (2nd
    law).
  • As more mass is added to the sled, the sleds
    inertia increases.
  • The sled would continue to move at a constant
    velocity and requires no force to keep it moving,
    due to its inertia. This is dynamic equilibrium.

7
36. To pull a wagon across a lawn at a constant
velocity, you have to exert a steady force. Does
this contradict Newtons first law?
  • No. The key is net force. Your steady force is
    balancing the rolling friction, which means that
    the net force 0, which means dynamic
    equilibrium, which means constant velocity, which
    means no acceleration. Removing friction would
    allow the wagon to continue moving at the same
    velocity without any more pull force.

8
Station 3 Penny with Hanger
  • What type of motion is illustrated when the penny
    is rotated in a circle using the hanger?
  • What is keeping the penny on the hanger?How does
    this activity illustrate Newtons first law of
    motion?
  • What would the penny do if the hanger was
    removed? Use the first law of motion to explain.

9
Station 3
  • Acceleration is illustrated by the rotating
    penny.
  • It takes an unbalanced force to cause the penny
    to turn in a circle or to keep it on the hanger.
    This unbalanced force is called centripetal
    force, and keeps the penny turning.
  • 3. If the hanger was removed, the penny would
    take a straight path due to its inertia.

10
8. When you whirl a can at the end of a string in
a circular path, what is the direction of the
force that acts on the can?
  • The force is directed inward towards the axis of
    rotation. This inward-directed force is called
    centripetal force.

11
42. Can an object move along a curved path if no
force acts on it?
  • No. An object moving along a curved path is
    accelerating and requires an unbalanced force to
    cause it to turn. This type of force is referred
    to as centripetal force.

12
Station 4
  1. Which ball has the most mass?
  2. Which ball has the greatest volume?
  3. Which ball has the greatest weight?
  4. Which ball is the most dense?
  5. Rank the balls in order from greatest to least
    inertia.
  6. Predict whether a solid disk or a hollow disk
    with roll down a ramp faster. Test to verify and
    explain why.

13
Station 4
  1. Most mass bowling ball
  2. Greatest volume bowling ball
  3. Greatest weight bowling ball
  4. Most dense bowling ball
  5. Most Inertia to least bowling ball, tennis
    ball, styrofoam ball
  6. The solid disk rolls faster down the ramp because
    it has less rotational inertia. The greater the
    rotational inertia, the greater the resistance to
    rotation. Rotational inertia increases as the
    mass of the object is distributed further from
    the center of rotation.

14
32. In an orbiting spacecraft, you are handed
two identical closed boxes, one filled with sand
and the other filled with feathers. How can you
tell which is which without opening the boxes?
  • The one that is easier to shake back and forth is
    the one with less mass (less inertia, less
    resistance to changes in motion)

15
37. When a junked car is crushed into a compact
cube, does its mass change? Its volume? Its
weight?
  • Mass remains unchanged.
  • Volume is reduced.
  • Weight remains unchanged (no change in position
    within the gravitational field so no change in
    gravitational force)

16
38. If an elephant was chasing you, its enormous
mass would be very threatening. But if you
zig-zagged, the elephants mass would be to your
advantage. Why?
  • Because the elephants mass is greater than
    yours, so is its inertia. Therefore, the
    elephant would have more difficulty switching
    directions than you because its inertia is
    greater.

17
40. Which has more mass, a 2-kg fluffy pillow or
a 3-kg small piece of iron? More volume? Why
are your answers different?
  • The iron has more mass (greater) and the pillow
    has more volume (takes up more space. The
    answers differ because mass and volume are
    completely different concepts.

18
20. Beginning from rest, a solid disk, a solid
ball and a hollow disk race down an incline.
What happens?
  • The solid ball moves fastest, followed by the
    solid ring and the hollow disk. The solid ball
    has the least amount of rotational inertia
    because its mass is distributed closest to the
    center or axis of rotation.

19
31. Consider two rotating bicycle wheels, one
filled with air and the other with water. Which
would be more difficult to stop rotating?
Explain.
  • The bicycle wheel filled with water would be the
    more difficult wheel to stop rotating because it
    has the greater amount of rotational inertia or
    resistance to change its rotational motion.

20
Station 5
  • What happened to the cart and clay figure during
    the test?
  • Why did the clay figure continue to move after
    the cart hit the wood block? Use Newtons First
    and Second laws of Motion to explain.

21
Station 5
  • 1. Both the cart and the clay figure move at the
    same speed in the same direction until the cart
    slams into the wood block. Then the clay figure
    moved forward after the cart stopped.
  • 2. The cart receives an unbalanced force, which
    causes the cart to decelerate rapidly (2nd law),
    but the clay figure does not, so it continues to
    move at the same speed and in the same direction
    due to its inertia until it receives an
    unbalanced force (1st law).

22
33. Many auto passengers suffer neck injuries
when struck by cars from behind. How does NL of
I apply? Why headrests?
  • The body is accelerated forward with the seat,
    but the head remains (behind) at its current
    velocity until an unbalanced force pulls it
    forward (which is the neck, which can cause
    whiplash if forceful enough).
  • Headrests provide the unbalanced force needed to
    accelerate the head with the body.

23
35. Suppose you place a ball in the middle of a
wagon that is at rest and then abruptly pull the
wagon forward. Describe the motion of the ball
relative to the ground.
  • Except for some change in motion due to friction
    between the wagon and ball, the will be no motion
    of the ball relative to the ground but relative
    to the wagon, the ball will appear to move toward
    the back.

24
43. The head of a hammer is loose and you wish to
tighten it by banging it against the top of a
workbench. Why is it better to hold the hammer
with the handle down as shown rather than with
the head down?
  • The handle stops when it hits the bench, but the
    relatively massive head tends to keep moving
    towards the handle and tightens.

25
Station 6
  • Weight Calculation Practice (show work, use sig
    figs)
  • Measure the mass of the block
  • Convert mass to kilograms
  • Calculate the weight of the block in pounds.
  • Convert the weight from pounds to newtons.
  • Multiply the mass (in kg) by acceleration rate
    due to gravity (on Earth) to find Fgrav (the
    weight of the object in newtons).

26
Station 6
  • 1. Mass of wood block 217.2 g
  • 2. Kilograms-- 0.2172 kg
  • 3. Weight of wood block convert using 1 kg
    2.2 lb
  • 0.2172 kg x 2.2 lb 0.48 lb
  • Convert pounds to newtons 1 lb 4.45 N
  • 0.48 lb x 4.45 N 2.1 N
  • Calculate weight using w mg
  • w 0.2172 kg x 9.8 m/s2 2.1 N

27
41. Is it more accurate to say that a dieting
person loses mass or loses weight?
  • It is more accurate to say that a dieting person
    is losing mass (the amount of matter that
    composes the person). A reduction in mass leads
    to a reduction in weight.
  • It is possible to change weight (only) if the
    person moves further from the Earths surface or
    to another place (such as the moon).

28
Station 7
  • The baseball, although encountering a small
    amount of air resistance across the diamond,
    continues to move without a force, due to its
    inertia. Only an unbalanced force with change
    its horizontal velocity.
  • Tendency for an object to resist acceleration is
    inertia.
  • In the plane 0 km/h, outside observer 925
    km/h
  • The coin keeps the same velocity in every
    situation. It is the passenger that changes
    speed and direction. This makes it appear to the
    passenger that the coin moved, but the coin
    maintains its velocity due to its inertia its
    the passenger that moved.

29
31. A space probe can be carried by a rocket
into outer space. Your friend asks what kind of
force keeps the probe moving after it is released
from the rocket and on its own. What is your
answer?
  • Nothing keeps the probe moving. With no
    propelling force it continues moving in a
    straight linemoving of its own inertia.
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