1 / 19

Gravity and Free Fall

Gravity and Free Fall. Gravity. Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727) developed a law of gravitation which said all objects in the universe attract each other through gravitational force Universal Gravitation Equation F = G m1m2 d 2

edie
Download Presentation

Gravity and Free Fall

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Gravity and Free Fall

  2. Gravity • Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727) developed a law of gravitation which said all objects in the universe attract each other through gravitational force • Universal Gravitation Equation • F = G m1m2 d2 • Equation shows grav. Force ↑ as both masses ↑ • Equation shows grav. Force ↓ as the distance b/w masses ↑

  3. Free Fall Free fall- when gravity is the only force acting on an object (free fall acceleration is directed toward center of earth) The acceleration of gravity (g) for objects in free fall at the earth's surface is 9.8 m/s2. Galileofound that all things fall at the same rate in the absence of air resistance, regardless of their mass

  4. Free Fall The rate of falling increases by 9.8 m/s every second. Height = ½ gt2 For example: ½ (9.8 )12 = 4.9 m½(9.8)22 = 19.6 m ½ (9.8)32 = 44.1 m ½ (9.8)42 = 78.4 m

  5. Air Resistance • In air… • A stone falls faster than a feather • Air resistance affects stone less • In a vacuum • A stone and a feather will fall at the same speed.

  6. Mass and Weight  different! ► Mass is an intrinsic property of an object. It is completely determined by the number and type of atoms that make up the object. It does not depend on the environment in which the object is located. ► But weight is different. Weight depends on both the object itself, and on some other object that exerts the gravitational force. So, for example, the mass of an object would be the same on the moon or the Earth; but the weight would be different.

  7. What does weight depend on? • The weight of an object depends on the object’s mass. • In fact, an object’s weight is directly proportional to the object’s mass. • The weight of an object also depends on the object’s location. • In fact, an object’s weight is directly proportional to its free fall acceleration, g at its current location.

  8. force of gravity newtons kg Weight = the force of gravity The weight of an object is, by definition, the strength of the force of gravity pulling the objectdownward. W = m g

  9. Weight of a 1 kg object • Since W = mg, the weight of a 1 kg object is: • W = (9.8 m/s2)(1 kg) = 9.8 N on Earth • W = (1.6 m/s2)(1 kg) = 1.6 N on the Moon

  10. Mass vs. Weight • Mass is not Weight • Weight is a force - an interaction between 2 objects involving a push or a pull. One of these objects is typically VERY big - the Earth or the Moon, for instance. • Weight is NOT a property of an object

  11. Weight • In symbols: W = mg W g m

  12. F If released, the acceleration of m would be … By Newton’s second law the force on m must be … Gravity What is the force acting on the mass m due to the Earth’s gravity? Solution g = 9.81 m/s2 That is, the magnitude, or strength, is mg and the direction is downward. By the way, what is the reaction force?

  13. 2-5. Free Fall A ball thrown horizontally will fall at the same rate as a ball dropped directly.

  14. 2-5. Free Fall A ball thrown into the air will slow down, stop, and then begin to fall with the acceleration due to gravity. When it passes the thrower, it will be traveling at the same rate at which it was thrown.

  15. Example. Playing catch with a softball The trajectory has 3 parts. free fall the throw the catch What is the force acting on the ball, during each part of the trajectory?

  16. Projectile Motion • An object thrown upward at an angle to the ground follows a curved path called a parabola. • combines vertical and horizontal motion • Orbiting objects- forward motion combines with free fall and object follows a curved path

  17. 2-6. Air Resistance • Free Fall • A person in free fall reaches a terminal velocity of around 54 m/s which means the person stops accelerating b/c: • Force of air resistance = gravitational force • Called terminal velocity (balanced forces) • With a parachute, terminal velocity is only 6.3 m/s • Allows a safe landing

  18. Free Fall Review • Dropping something from a resting position (gains speed as it falls so it accelerates) • Gravity pulls objects down (air resistance can affect how fast) (no air resistance- in a vacuum) • When gravity is the only thing that affects falling object → FREE FALL • Acceleration due to gravity is 9.8 m/s2

  19. Free Fall equations • V = g x t • D = 1 gt2 2

More Related