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CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTON’S LAWS OF MOTION

CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

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Page 1: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

CHAPTER 2 NOTESGRAVITY AND NEWTON’S LAWS OF MOTION

Page 2: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

GRAVITY AND ACCELERATION

ALL OBJECTS FALL TO THE GROUND AT THE SAME RATE.

THE ACCELERATION DUE TO GRAVITY IS THE SAME FOR ALL OBJECTS.

ACCELERATION DEPENDS ON BOTH FORCE AND MASS.

Page 3: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

Why do all objects fall to the ground at the

same time? A heavier object has a greater gravitational force

than a lighter object.

A heavier object is harder to accelerate because it has more mass (more inertia).

The extra mass balances the extra (increased) gravitational force so they fall at the same acceleration.

video1

Page 4: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

ACCELERATION

Rate at which velocity changes

Change in velocity divided by the amount of time that change occurs

All objects accelerate toward the Earth at 9.8 m/s/s

Every second that an object falls, the object’s downward velocity increases by 9.8 m/s

Page 5: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

Calculating Velocity of Falling Objects

Change in velocity = gravity x time

Gravity = 9.8 m/s/s

A penny is dropped from the top of a tall stairwell. What is the penny’s velocity after it has fallen for 2 seconds?

Change in velocity = 9.8 m/s/s x 2s

= 19.6 m/s downward

Page 6: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

The same penny hits the ground in 4.5 seconds. What is the penny’s velocity as it hits the ground?

Change in velocity = 9.8 m/s/s x 4.5 s

= 44.1 m/s downward

• A marble at rest is dropped from a tall building. The marble hits the ground with a velocity of 98 m/s. How long was the marble in the air?

98 m/s = 9.8 m/s/s x T

= 98 m/s divided by 9.8 m/s/s = 10 seconds

Page 7: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

An acorn at rest falls from an oak tree. The acorn hits the ground with a velocity of 14.7 m/s. How long did it take the acorn to land?

14.7 m/s = 9.8 m/s/s x T =

14.7 divided by 9.8 =

1.5 seconds

Page 8: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

MORE PROBLEMS

A boy standing on a high cliff dives into the ocean below and strikes the water after 3 seconds. What is the boy’s velocity when he hits the water?

Page 9: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

Velocity = 9.8 x 3

= 29.4 m/s downward

Page 10: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

A foul ball is hit straight up in the air and falls from the top of its motion for 1.4 seconds before being caught by the catcher. What is the velocity of the ball as it hits the catcher’s glove?

Page 11: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

Velocity = 9.8 x 1.4 =

13.72 m/s downward

Page 12: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

A brick falls from the top of a building and strikes the ground with a velocity of 19.6 m/s downward. How long does the brick fall?

Page 13: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

19.6 m/s = 9.8 m/s/s x T

= 19.6/9.8 =

2 seconds

Page 14: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

AIR RESISTANCE

Force that opposes motion

Amount of air resistance depends on size, shape and speed of the object

More surface area slows the falling object down

Page 15: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

TERMINAL VELOCITY

When a falling object falls at constant velocity.

As speed of a falling object increases, air resistance increases. The upward force continues to increase until it is equal to the downward force of gravity. At this point the net force is 0 N and the object stops accelerating.

Page 17: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

FREE FALL

Object are in free fall only if gravity is pulling down and no other forces are acting on it.

Free fall can only occur if there is no air / air resistance (air resistance is a force). This would be in a vacuum or in space.

Page 18: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

ORBITING

Astronauts float in orbiting spacecrafts because of free fall.

An object is orbiting when its traveling around another object in space.

A space craft travels forward, but at the same time gravity pulls it towards the Earth. This is orbiting.

Page 19: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

CENTRIPETAL FORCE

Gravity provides the centripetal force that keeps objects in orbit.

Centripetal force is the unbalanced force that causes objects to move in a circular path.

This force keeps planets orbiting the Sun and moons orbiting their planets.

Page 20: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

PROJECTILE MOTIONProjectile motion is the curved path an object

follows when it is thrown or propelled near the surface of the Earth.

2 COMPONENTS combine to form a curved path:

1. Horizontal motion: The force given to an object such as throwing or kicking. This horizontal force is at constant velocity.

2. Vertical motion: the downward motion due to gravity. This velocity increases because of gravity.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ymgMNLPw1yY&list=PLuqizYjiBk2R9juOqfbN78K9h_K5b7OrW

Page 21: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

NEWTON’S 1st LAW

An object at rest remains at rest, and an object in motion remains in motion at constant speed and in a straight line unless acted on by an unbalanced force.

Friction is an unbalanced force that will change an object’s motion.

Inertia – tendency for an object to resist motion

Page 22: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

Newton’s 2nd Law

The acceleration of an object depends on the mass of the object and the amount of force applied.

Force = mass x acceleration

F=ma

Page 23: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

Which needs more force to accelerate at the same rate?

FORCE = MASS x ACCELERATION

Page 24: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION
Page 25: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

Newton’s 3rd Law

Whenever one object exerts a force on a second object, the second object exerts an equal and opposite force on the first.

All forces act in pairs. If a force is exerted, another force occurs that is equal in size and opposite in direction.

They do not always act on the same object.

Page 26: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

MOMENTUM

Depends on an objects mass and acceleration.

P = m x v

Law of conservation of momentum: when objects collide, momentum is never lost; some can be transferred into the second object

Page 27: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

SPORTS SCIENCE

NFL –

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F1FHm_EmcRw

Intro to 3 Laws

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MAm6LOUnJ80

Newton’s 1st Law:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F9COtJBBzhk

Page 28: CHAPTER 2 NOTES GRAVITY AND NEWTONS LAWS OF MOTION

SPORTS SCIENCE

Newton’s 2nd Law

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJTKiS444BQ

Newton’s 3rd Law

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9k48c9Z1VjY

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTZI-kpppuw

Football vs soccer

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQy8dFco_xY