- Galileo discovered that all objects accelerate at the same rate when falling, due to gravity, regardless of their mass. Heavier objects experience a greater force of gravity but require more force to accelerate as their mass increases.
- Newton's Second Law states that acceleration depends on both the mass of an object and the net force acting upon it. Greater mass requires a greater force for the same acceleration.
- Newton's Third Law states that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. Whenever one object exerts a force on a second object, the second object exerts an equal and opposite force back on the first.
Unlocking the Potential: Deep dive into ocean of Ceramic Magnets.pptx
Force, mass, acceleration
1. Gravity and Motion
• Aristotle (400BCE) – rate of acceleration
depended on mass
• Galileo (late 1500’s) – mass of an object
does not affect the rate at which an object
falls
• Why? Acceleration depends on force and
mass
2. • Heavier object experiences greater force
of gravity, however, it takes more force to
accelerate
• Heavier mass is balance by additional
force of gravity so all objects will fall at
same rate
• Acceleration – rate at which velocity
(either speed or direction)change over
time
3. • All objects accelerate toward earth at
9.8m/s2
. which means…
• For every second object falls, downward
velocity increases by 9.8 m/s
• Air resistance – force that opposes
motion through air
4. • Air resistance depends on size, shape
and speed
• Speed of a falling object increases, air
resistance increases
• The upward force of air resistance
continues to increase until it is equal to the
downward force of gravity and the net
force = 0, the object stops accelerating
5. • Terminal velocity – constant velocity of a
falling object
• Free fall – happens only when gravity is
acting on an object (no air resistance)
• Vacuum – place where there is no matter
(space)
• Orbit – forward motion with a change in
velocity (direction)
6. • Centripetal force – force that causes
objects to move in a circular path
• Projectile motion – curved path that an
object follows when thrown, launched or
otherwise projected near the earths
surface – consists of horizontal and
vertical motion
• Inertia – the tendency of all objects to
resist any change in motion
7. Newton’s 3 Laws of Motion
• Newton’s First Law of Motion – Law of
inertia
– An object at rest remains at rest, and an
object in motion remains in motion at a
constant speed and in a straight line unless
acted on by an unbalanced force
– Mass is a measure of inertia – the greater the
mass the greater force of inertia
8. • Newton’s Second Law of Motion –
– The acceleration of an object depends on the mass of
the object and the amount of force applied.
Formula: F= m x a
• Acceleration depends on mass – as mass
increases, the amount of force need to
accelerate an object increases
• Acceleration of an object is always in direction of
the force applied
10. • Newton’s Third Law of Motion
– Whenever one object exerts a force on a
second object the second object exerts an
equal and opposite force on the first object
• Sometimes called the “action / reaction”
law
• States that all forces work in pairs.
11. • Momentum – product of the mass and
velocity of an object ( p = m x v )
• The Law of Conservation of Momentum
– Momentum can not be gain or lost, only
transferred
– Any time objects collide, the total amount of
momentum stays the same. (Newton’s 3rd law)