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Newton’s Second Law. “ Forces do not cause motion. Forces cause accelerations”. Newton’s 2 nd Law. Recall acceleration is the rate of change of velocity – either speed or direction Σ F is the sum of all the forces acting on an object – it is not the name of any one particular force.
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Newton’s Second Law “ Forces do not cause motion. Forces cause accelerations”
Newton’s 2nd Law Recall acceleration is the rate of change of velocity – either speed or direction ΣFis the sum of all the forces acting on an object – it is not the name of any one particular force. Therefore, you can’t apply a net force to an object, you can only apply a force that may result in a net force. If the sum of all the forces acting is NOT = 0, then we say there is a net force acting on an object. Newton’s 2nd Law: a net force causes a mass to accelerate to change its state of motion to do something different than it’s already doing A constant (consistent amount of) net force causes a constant acceleration Any size net force, no matter how small, causes any size mass, no matter how big, to accelerate.
The Math of Newton’s 2nd Law… a αΣF (direct) so, for the same mass, as ΣF changes, the a changes by the same multiple Ex: If ΣF = 3 N causes a = 8 m/s2, then if ΣF= 9 N on the same m, the a = _____ a α1/m (inverse) so, for the same ΣF, as m changes, the a changes by the inverse multiple Ex: If m = 10 kg has an a = 4 m/s2, then if m= 5 kg with same ΣF, the a = _____ But we can combine these 2 proportions to get a αΣF/ m where the constant to make the proportion an equation has a value of 1, so a = (1) ΣF/ m or just a = ΣF/ m or more commonly, ΣF= ma
The Units of the ΣFnet = ma equation: 1 Newton = 1 kg1m/s2 so then if a =ΣFnet/ m the units are: = N / kg = kgm/s2 kg = m/s2 , which makes sense for a or if m =ΣFnet/ a the units are: = N / m/s2 = kgm/s2 m/s2 = kg , which makes sense for m All of this applies to Fg = mg too! See it ?!?!? ΣFnet = ma is a more generic form, good for anyforce, whereas Fg = mg is only appropriate to determine the force of gravity (weight) using the acceleration due to gravity (g).
Friction Friction Ff is a force that acts between 2 touching objects always parallel to the 2 surfaces in contact always opposite the direction of (attempted) motion so make sure you make it negative when placed in the ΣF eq’n
3 Types of Friction between Solid Surfaces 1. Static - Ffs – opposes the start of motion For any 2 given surfaces, it has a range of values: 0 < Ffs < max when motion begins 2. Kinetic (or Sliding) - Ffk – opposes the actual motion Has a constant value for any 2 given surfaces Contrary to popular belief, does NOT depend on Amount of surface area touching Relative speed between the 2 surfaces 3. Rolling – like with a ball – we don’t cover this… There is a 4th type of friction that is not between solids… more to come soon.
The math of friction: Ff = μFN so the amount of friction depends on 2 things: 1. μ is the Greek letter mu • it represents the coefficient of friction • “the nature of the 2 surfaces in contact…” • it has no units: μ = Ff /FN would cancel the only units of Newton/Newton • its value is determined experimentally by the 2 materials in contact (see chart) Note: static friction is generally greater than kinetic friction for any 2 surfaces. This explains why it’s harder to get an object moving than it is to keep it moving! (Not due to inertia!)
(The math of friction: Ff = μFN) (so the amount of friction depends on 2 things:) 2. FN is the normal force • Recall this is the perpendicular supporting force of a surface that’s under an object • Determined by how much the 2 surfaces are pressed together as they try to move across each other • So while FN is not the weight, the weight will often play some role here This is a magnitude only equation – it only determines the size of the force of friction. Ff’s direction is always negative, but we don’t deal with that when using this equation.
Pressure… it’s different than Force Pressure - the amount of force per unit of area The math Eq’n: Pressure = Force/Area or P = F/A Units: Pascals= Newtons/meters2 or Pa = N/m2 (common units in our system are lbs/in2) Examples • Petite woman’s high heel vs large man’s dress shoe: He might be 2x’s as heavy (F), but her heel might only cover 1/100th the area (A)… so that’s 50x’s more pressure (P) from woman’s heel! • Bed of nails… As painful as 400 nails may seem, compare it to only 100 nails or to only 10 nails or to just 1 nail… Ouch!
4th Type of Friction: Fluid Friction Friction doesn’t only occur between solid surfaces – it occurs between fluids too. A fluid is anything that flows so liquids and gases are both fluids. Opposite of Solid Friction, it does depend on • Speed the object is moving • Surface area of the object Examples: running through water shooting a gun under water (Myth Busters) Air resistance…see handout