CIE IGCSE Physics
Turning Forces
Circular Motion and Gravitational attraction
Centripetal ForceRecap of Forces
The meaning of centripetal force
The three factors on which centripetal force depends
1
2
3
Why an object moving in a circle has an inward acceleration
Task
Complete sheet on
Terminal Velocity
Centripetal ForceCENTRIPETAL FORCE is the general
name given to a centrally directed force that causes circular motion.
Tension provides the CENTRIPETAL FORCE required by the hammer thrower.
Other examples of centripetal force
Situation Centripetal force
Earth orbiting the Sun GRAVITY of the Sun
Car going around a bend. FRICTION on the car’s tyres
Airplane banking (turning) PUSH of air on the airplane’s wings
Electron orbiting a nucleus ELECTROSTATIC attraction due to opposite charges
Factors affecting centripetal force
Centripetal force
INCREASES if:- the object is moved FASTER
- the object’s mass is INCREASED.
- the radius of the circle is DECREASED.
Centripetal Force
Why does an object moving in a circle have an inward acceleration ?
When an object moves in a circle, there is unbalanced force on it that acts towards the center of the circle.
Newton 2 what happens if an object has an unbalanced force on it?
Acceleration- How?
Acceleration is the change in velocity / time
Remember
velocity is a vector – speed and direction
So we have ……..
What happens if the string breaks?
What direction does the ball move?
Remember Newton 1
String breaking quiz
Draw on the diagram provided
Tasks
Do questions 1- 4 on page 49
Question 12 on page 51
Fill in missing words
Choose appropriate words to fill in the gaps below:
An object will only move along a __________ path if it is constantly acted on by a centripetal _________. The force is always directed __________ the centre of the circular path.
Centripetal force ___________ if the object moves in a smaller radius path or at a __________ speed.
An example of a _________ force is the Moon orbiting the Earth due to the Earth’s _____________ pull on the Moon.
centripetal
circulargravitational
increasestowards
greater
WORD SELECTION:
force
centripetal
circular
gravitational
increases
towards
greater
force
Centripetal ForceRecap of Forces
The meaning of centripetal force
The three factors on which centripetal force depends
1
2
3
Why an object moving in a circle has an inward acceleration
Circular Motion SimulationsLadybug Revolution - PhET - Join the ladybug in an exploration of rotational motion. Rotate the merry-go-round to change its angle, or choose a constant angular velocity or angular acceleration. Explore how circular motion relates to the bug's x,y position, velocity, and acceleration using vectors or graphs. Motion in 2D - PhET - Learn about velocity and acceleration vectors. Move the ball with the mouse or let the simulation move the ball in four types of motion (2 types of linear, simple harmonic, circle). See the velocity and acceleration vectors change as the ball moves. Motion produced by a force - linear & circular cases - netfirms Uniform circular motion - Fendt Carousel - centripetal force - Fendt Relation between speed and centripetal force - NTNU Vertical circle & force vectors - NTNU Circular Motion & Centripetal Force - NTNU Inertia of a lead brick & Circular motion of a water glass - 'Whys Guy' Video Clip (3 mins) (2nd of 2 clips)
Gravitational attraction
• Gravity is an attractive force
• Gravity depends on mass and the distance between objects.
Gravitational field strengthGravitational field strength is equal to the force exerted on
an object of mass 1kg.
On the Earth’s surface the gravitational field strength is about 10 N/kg (okay 9.81 N/kg)
Moon’s surface = 1.6 N/kg
Mars’ surface = 3.7 N/kg
Weight is the force of gravity on an object.
Gravitational attractionGravity is a force exerted by all objects on each
other.Gravitational force:- is always attractive- increases if the mass of the objects is
increased- decreases if the distance between the
objects is increased – it is inversely proportional
- P.S These are Sir Isaac Newton’s rules on Gravity
CompleteAnswersSurface Field Strength
(N/kg)Object mass
(kg)Object weight
(N)
Earth 10 80
Moon 1.6 80
Mars 3.7 740
Jupiter 60 1500
Pluto 0.07 80
800
128
200
25
5.6
Choose appropriate words to fill in the gaps below:
Gravity is a force exerted by all ________ on each other because of their ________.
Gravitational force __________ if the distance between the objects is increased but __________ if their masses are increased.
_________ is the force of gravity on an object. On the Earth’s surface an object of mass 1kg has a weight of 10 __________.
The Moon’s gravity is about one sixth the strength of the Earth’s because its _________ is much lower.
decreasesnewtons objectsincreases
mass weight
WORD SELECTION:
masses
decreases
newtons
objects
increases
mass
weight
masses
Gravity SimulationsFree-fall Lab - Explore Science Galileo Time of Fall Demonstration - 'Whys Guy' Video Clip (3 mins) - Time of fall independent of mass - Leads slug and feather with and without air resistance. (1st of 2 clips) Distance Proportional to Time of Fall Squared Demonstration - 'Whys Guy' Video Clip (3:30 mins) - Falling distance proportional to the time of fall squared. (2nd of 2 clips some microphone problems) Lunar Lander - PhET - Can you avoid the boulder field and land safely, just before your fuel runs out, as Neil Armstrong did in 1969? Our version of this classic video game accurately simulates the real motion of the lunar lander with the correct mass, thrust, fuel consumption rate, and lunar gravity. The real lunar lander is very hard to control. Moonlander Use your thrusters to overcome the effects of gravity and bring the moonlander safely down to earth. BBC KS3 Bitesize Revision: Mass and gravity Weight