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PHY131H1F - Class 5 4.1 Newton’s First Law 3.6 Uniform and nonuniform circular motion 4.2 Newton’s Second Law 4.3 The Fundamental Forces 4.4 The Force of Gravity (No, it isn’t, Calvin. For an explanation of buoyancy force, see Chapter 15..) Clicker Question • You toss a ball straight up in the air. • Immediately after you let go of it, what forces are acting on the ball? 1. The downward force of gravity from the Earth. 2. An upward throwing force from your hand. 3. A small downward drag-force from air resistance. A. 1, 2 and 3 B. 1 and 3 C. 1 and 2 D. 1 only E. 2 and 3 1 Test is coming up!! • The midterm is Tuesday Oct. 6 from 6pm-7:30pm. • It is based on Wolfson Chs.1-4 plus everything from lectures, Practicals and MasteringPhysics. • If you have a conflict with this time, you must sign up for the alternate sitting on portal by tomorrow 4pm at the latest! • Click on “Alternative Sitting Registration”, fill out the form. • If you fill out the form, you will be accepted into the alternate sitting. April will send you an email soon – probably Wednesday, letting you know what room the test will be in. Class 5 Preclass Quiz on MasteringPhysics This was due this morning at 8:00am 78% of students answered correctly: When a constant net force acts on an object, the object moves with a constant acceleration. 89% of students answered correctly: The same net force is applied to two different objects. The second object has twice the mass of the first object. The acceleration of object 1 is twice the acceleration of object 2. 71% of students answered correctly: A 1-lb block and a 100-lb block are placed side by side at the top of a frictionless hill. Each is given a very light tap to begin their race to the bottom of the hill. In the absence of air resistance, the two blocks end in a tie. 2 Class 5 Preclass Quiz Student Comments “Is there any way I can take this course without taking MAT135?” Harlow Answer: No. If you drop MAT135 you will be deleted from PHY131 as well because it is a co-requisite. “what is the unit lb?” Harlow Answer: “lb” is a short form for “pound”. It comes from the Latin word “libra” which refers to a pan balance. Anyway it’s a unit of force, the conversion is: 2.2 lbs = 9.8 N. This is the kind of conversion you will be given on page 1 of the test. Class 5 Preclass Quiz Student Comments “We're no strangers to love You know the rules and so do I A full commitment's what I'm thinking of You wouldn't get this from any other guy I just want to tell you how I'm feeling Gotta make you understand Harlow comment: ONO! You Rick-roll’d me on MasteringPhysics!! [Chorus:] Never gonna give you up, never gonna let you down Never gonna run around and desert you Never gonna make you cry, never gonna say goodbye Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you …” 3 Class 5 Preclass Quiz Student Comments “Do we need to memorize all formula we learned ?” Harlow Answer: No. You can just write it on your aidsheet. “Since the earth is orbiting around the sun, and so it's constantly accelerating in uniform circular motion, how come we on earth don't feel these effects but instead seem to be in an inert frame of reference?” Harlow answer: Great question! There are two reasons. #1 the effect of acceleration is pretty small – 0.006 m/s2. #2, it is quite steady. We already have g = 9.8 m/s2 as the acceleration due to the Earth’s gravity – the extra accelerations from the orbit and rotation of the Earth would only change our measurements of g, they wouldn’t be noticed in any other way. Class 5 Preclass Quiz Student Comments “Are our quizzes before class based on what you tell use to read, or on the whole chapter?” Harlow answer: Just for what you needed to read. For example, today’s was only sections 4.1-4.4. “Do you have any specific way in which you would want us to draw free body diagrams? The textbook indicates that the object should be represented with a dot, but would a box be acceptable as well?” Harlow answer: For the tests and final exam, if you are asked to draw a free-body diagram, it should look a lot like what the book does. If you replace the dot with a box, it should be a small box, with the forces emanating from it (not pointing toward it). 4 Uniform Circular MotionAcceleration Speed is constant. 𝑣= 2𝜋𝑟 𝑇 where T = Period [s] Centripetal Acceleration 5 Centripetal Acceleration Clicker Question A car is traveling East at a constant speed of 100 km/hr. Without speeding up of slowing down, it is turning left, following the curve in the highway. What is the direction of the acceleration? N W E S A. North B. East C. North-East D. North-West E. None; the acceleration is zero. 6 Nonuniform Circular Motion • Any object traveling along a curved path has centripetal acceleration, equal to v2/r. • If, as it is traveling in a circle, it is speeding up or slowing down, it also has tangential acceleration. • The total acceleration is the vector sum of these two perpendicular components Nonuniform Circular Motion • In nonuniform circular motion, speed and path radius can both change. • The acceleration has both radial and tangential components: a ar at a at2 ar2 • ar is perpendicular to v while at is tangential to v . 7 Last day I asked at the end of class: • A paperback novel has a mass of 0.3 kg and slides at a constant velocity. A chemistry textbook has a mass of 3.0 kg, and slides at the same constant velocity. How does the net force on the textbook compare to the net force on the novel? • ANSWER: SAME – zero! • The net force on any object is proportional to its acceleration. • In the case of these two books, they are both traveling at a constant velocity, meaning acceleration is zero. • Any friction must be offset by some pushing force, not mentioned in the question. What is a force? • A force is a push or a pull on an object. • Pushes and pulls are applied to something • From the object’s perspective, it has a force exerted on it • A force is either a contact force (like normal) or a long-range force (like gravity). • The S.I. unit of force is the Newton (N) • N is not a fundamental unit; it can be broken down into fundamental units: 1 N = 1 kg m s −2 8 Drawing force vectors A Short Catalog of Forces The forces we deal with most often in PHY131/132 are: • Gravity (Fg = mg) • Electric • Normal Force • Magnetic • Tension • Thrust (like from a rocket) • Static Friction • Drag (fluid resistance) • Spring Force • Muscle • Kinetic Friction ( fk = μkn) 9 Gravity • 𝐹𝐺 = 𝑚𝑔 when the object is near the surface of Earth N FG • 𝑔 = 9.80 kg , 𝑑𝑜𝑤𝑛 • Also called “weight” “The Earth exerts a gravity force on the angry bird.” Normal Force “The diving board exerts a normal force on the dog.” 10 Tension “The rope exerts a tension force on Harlow.” An Even Shorter Catalog of Forces The fundamental forces in the universe are: 1. Gravity (Fg = mg) 2. Electric & Magnetic 3. “Weak Nuclear” – governs beta-decay 4. “Strong Nuclear” – holds the nucleus together • Every force you can experience is a manifestation of one or more of the above. • It has been shown that #2 and #3 are diferent aspects of the same, more fundamental force, called “electroweak”. • So there are truly only three fundamental forces. 11 A Person Exerts a Force on A Wall This contact force is an example of: A. Gravity Force B. Electric & Magnetic Force C. Weak (radioactive decay) D. Strong (holds nucleus together) E. None of the above 12 1 Newton’s First Law The natural state of an object with no net external force on it is to either remain at rest or continue to move in a straight line with a constant velocity. What is Mass? • • • Mass is a scalar quantity that describes an object’s inertia. It describes the amount of matter in an object. Mass is an intrinsic property of an object. • It tells us something about the object, regardless of where the object is, what it’s doing, or whatever forces may be acting on it. 13 Momentum Momentum is the product of a particle’s mass and velocity, has units of kg m/s, and is given by An object can have a larger momentum if it is: • moving faster or, • has more mass Note: Momentum is a vector quantity. It has both x and y components. Examples • A 1000 kg car travels west at 25 m/s. What is its momentum? • A 0.01 kg bullet is fired straight up, and leaves the gun with a muzzle speed of 1000 m/s. What is its momentum? 14 2 Newton’s Second Law The rate at which a body’s momentum changes is equal to the net force acting on the body: 𝐹net 2 𝑑𝑝 = 𝑑𝑡 Newton’s Second Law 𝑝 = 𝑚𝑣 𝐹net 𝑑 𝑑 𝑑𝑣 = 𝑝 = 𝑚𝑣 = 𝑚 𝑑𝑡 𝑑𝑡 𝑑𝑡 𝐹net = 𝑚𝑎 15 Clicker Question Three forces act on an object. In which direction does the object accelerate? Projectile Motion Example • An angry bird of mass m = 0.12 kg is flying through the air. His wings are tucked in, and air resistance is negligible. • What is the acceleration of the bird? 16 Problem Solving Strategy • Acceleration is the link between dynamics and kinematics. • From Fnet, find a. • From a and initial conditions, find vx, vy, x, y. • a = 0 is the condition for equilibrium. • Equilibrium occurs if and only if Fnet = 0. Clicker Question • A green ball swings back and forth between positions 1, 2 and 3. Fg is the magnitude of the force of gravity on the ball. T is the magnitude of the tension force on the ball. At the instant the ball is in position 2, A. Fg > T B. Fg < T C. Fg = T 17 • Newton’s Laws only apply in a “inertial reference frames”. They are not valid if your reference frame is accelerating! • An inertial reference frame is one that is not accelerating. Clicker Question • You are in a plane which is accelerating forward on a runway. • Some careless person has left a tennis ball in the aisle. You notice this tennis ball is accelerating toward the back of the plane. • Newton’s Second Law states that Fnet = ma, so there must be a net force on the tennis ball. What is the source of this backward net force? A. Air resistance B. The plane must be at an angle, so a component of gravity provides the net force toward the back of the plane. C. The inertial force D. The normal force E. Newton’s second law is not valid in your reference frame. 18 Gravity for Earthlings If you happen to live on the surface of a large planet with radius R = 6370 km and mass M = 5.97 × 1024 kg, then there will be a force acting on every object of mass m called its “weight”: 𝑤 = 𝑚𝑔 Where 𝑔 = 9.80 m/s2 toward the centre of the planet. (ie “down”). Clicker Question • When I stand on a scale in my bathroom it reads 185 pounds. 2.2 pounds = 9.8 Newtons, so this means the upward force on my feet when I am standing still is 185 lbs (9.8 N / 2.2 lbs) = 824 N. • If I ride an elevator which is accelerating upward at 1.5 m/s2, what is the upward force on my feet? • With no calculations, take a wild guess from this list: A. 824 N B. 950 N C. 698 N D. 0 N E. –824 N 19 Before Class 6 on Wednesday • Please finish reading Chapter 4. • The midterm is Tuesday Oct. 6 from 6pm-7:30pm. If you have a conflict with this time, you must sign up for the alternate sitting on portal by tomorrow at the latest! Click on “Alternative Sitting Registration” • Consider the following reasoning, and identify the mistake: • “When you pull a wagon, Newton’s 3rd law states that the wagon pulls back on you with an equal and opposite force. These forces should cancel each other. So it is impossible to accelerate the wagon!” 20