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Physics 111: Mechanics
Lecture 4
Dale Gary
NJIT Physics Department
Feb. 11-15, 2013
The Laws of Motion
 Newton’s first law
 Force
 Mass
 Newton’s second law
 Newton’s third law
 Examples
Isaac Newton’s work represents one of the greatest
contributions to science ever made by an individual.
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Dynamics
 Describes the relationship between the motion
of objects in our everyday world and the forces
acting on them
 Language of Dynamics
 Force: The measure of interaction between two
objects (pull or push). It is a vector quantity – it has a
magnitude and direction
 Mass: The measure of how difficult it is to change
object’s velocity (sluggishness or inertia of the object)
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Forces
 The measure of interaction
between two objects (pull or
push)
 Vector quantity: has
magnitude and direction
 May be a contact force or a
field force
 Contact forces result from
physical contact between two
objects
 Field forces act between
disconnected objects
 Also called “action at a distance”
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Forces
 Gravitational Force
 Archimedes Force
 Friction Force
 Tension Force
 Spring Force
 Normal Force
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Vector Nature of Force
 Vector force: has magnitude and direction
 Net Force: a resultant force acting on object
 You must use the rules of vector addition to
obtain the net force on an object
......
3
2
1 



  F
F
F
F
Fnet





2 2
1 2
1 1
2
| | 2.24 N
tan ( ) 26.6
F F F
F
F
 
  
  
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Newton’s First Law
 An object at rest tends to stay at rest and an
object in motion tends to stay in motion with
the same speed and in the same direction
unless acted upon by an unbalanced force
 An object at rest remains at rest as long as no net force acts on it
 An object moving with constant velocity continues to move with
the same speed and in the same direction (the same velocity) as
long as no net force acts on it
 “Keep on doing what it is doing”
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Newton’s First Law
 An object at rest tends to stay at rest and an
object in motion tends to stay in motion with
the same speed and in the same direction
unless acted upon by an unbalanced force
 When forces are balanced, the acceleration of the object is zero
 Object at rest: v = 0 and a = 0
 Object in motion: v  0 and a = 0
 The net force is defined as the vector sum of all the external forces
exerted on the object. If the net force is zero, forces are balanced.
When forces are balances, the object can be stationary, or move
with constant velocity.
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Mass and Inertia
 Every object continues in its state of rest, or uniform
motion in a straight line, unless it is compelled to change
that state by unbalanced forces impressed upon it
 Inertia is a property of objects
to resist changes is motion!
 Mass is a measure of the
amount of inertia.
 Mass is a measure of the resistance of an object to
changes in its velocity
 Mass is an inherent property of an object
 Scalar quantity and SI unit: kg
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Newton’s Second Law
 The acceleration of an object is directly
proportional to the net force acting on
it and inversely proportional to its mass
m
F
m
F
a net






a
m
F
Fnet




 
Feb. 11-15, 2013
 Newton’s second law:
 SI unit of force is a Newton (N)
 US Customary unit of force is a pound (lb)
 1 N = 0.225 lb
 Weight, also measured in lbs. is a force (mass x
acceleration). What is the acceleration in that case?
Units of Force
2
s
m
kg
1
N
1 
a
m
F
Fnet




 
Feb. 11-15, 2013
More about Newton’s 2nd Law
 You must be certain about which body we are
applying it to
 Fnet must be the vector sum of all the forces that act
on that body
 Only forces that act on that body are to be included
in the vector sum
 Net force component along an
axis gives rise to the acceleration
along that same axis
x
x
net ma
F 
, y
y
net ma
F 
,
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Sample Problem
 One or two forces act on a puck that moves over frictionless ice
along an x axis, in one-dimensional motion. The puck's mass is m =
0.20 kg. Forces F1 and F2 and are directed along the x axis and
have magnitudes F1 = 4.0 N and F2 = 2.0 N. Force F3 is directed at
angle  = 30° and has magnitude F3 = 1.0 N. In each situation, what
is the acceleration of the puck?
x
x
net ma
F 
,
2
1
1
m/s
20
kg
2
.
0
N
0
.
4
)




m
F
a
ma
F
a
x
x
2
2
1
2
1
m/s
10
kg
2
.
0
N
0
.
2
N
0
.
4
)







m
F
F
a
ma
F
F
b
x
x
2
2
3
3
,
3
2
,
3
m/s
7
.
5
kg
2
.
0
N
0
.
2
30
cos
N
0
.
1
cos
cos
)










m
F
F
a
F
F
ma
F
F
c
x
x
x
x


Feb. 11-15, 2013
Gravitational Force
 Gravitational force is a vector
 Expressed by Newton’s Law of Universal
Gravitation:
 G – gravitational constant
 M – mass of the Earth
 m – mass of an object
 R – radius of the Earth
 Direction: pointing downward
2
R
mM
G
Fg 
Feb. 11-15, 2013
 The magnitude of the gravitational force acting on an
object of mass m near the Earth’s surface is called the
weight w of the object: w = mg
 g can also be found from the Law of Universal Gravitation
 Weight has a unit of N
 Weight depends upon location
Weight
mg
F
w g 

R = 6,400 km
2
2
m/s
8
.
9


R
M
G
g
2
R
mM
G
Fg 
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Normal Force
 Force from a solid
surface which keeps
object from falling
through
 Direction: always
perpendicular to the
surface
 Magnitude: depends
on situation
mg
F
w g 

y
g ma
F
N 

mg
N 
y
ma
mg
N 

Feb. 11-15, 2013
Tension Force: T
 A taut rope exerts forces
on whatever holds its
ends
 Direction: always along
the cord (rope, cable,
string ……) and away
from the object
 Magnitude: depend on
situation
T1
T2
T1 = T = T2
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Newton’s Third Law
 If object 1 and object 2 interact, the force
exerted by object 1 on object 2 is equal in
magnitude but opposite in direction to the
force exerted by object 2 on object 1
 Equivalent to saying a single isolated force cannot exist
B
on
A
on F
F




Feb. 11-15, 2013
Newton’s Third Law cont.
 F12 may be called the
action force and F21 the
reaction force
 Actually, either force can
be the action or the
reaction force
 The action and reaction
forces act on different
objects
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Some Action-Reaction Pairs
2
R
mM
G
Fg 
2
R
mM
G
Fg 
2
R
Gm
M
Ma
Fg 

2
R
GM
m
mg
Fg 

Feb. 11-15, 2013
Free Body Diagram
 The most important step in
solving problems involving
Newton’s Laws is to draw the
free body diagram
 Be sure to include only the
forces acting on the object of
interest
 Include any field forces acting
on the object
 Do not assume the normal
force equals the weight
F hand on book
F Earth on book
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Hints for Problem-Solving
 Read the problem carefully at least once
 Draw a picture of the system, identify the object of primary interest,
and indicate forces with arrows
 Label each force in the picture in a way that will bring to mind what
physical quantity the label stands for (e.g., T for tension)
 Draw a free-body diagram of the object of interest, based on the
labeled picture. If additional objects are involved, draw separate
free-body diagram for them
 Choose a convenient coordinate system for each object
 Apply Newton’s second law. The x- and y-components of Newton
second law should be taken from the vector equation and written
individually. This often results in two equations and two unknowns
 Solve for the desired unknown quantity, and substitute the numbers
x
x
net ma
F 
, y
y
net ma
F 
,
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Objects in Equilibrium
 Objects that are either at rest or moving with
constant velocity are said to be in equilibrium
 Acceleration of an object can be modeled as
zero:
 Mathematically, the net force acting on the
object is zero
 Equivalent to the set of component equations
given by
0

F

0

a

0

 x
F 0

 y
F
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Equilibrium, Example 1
 A lamp is suspended from a
chain of negligible mass
 The forces acting on the
lamp are
 the downward force of gravity
 the upward tension in the
chain
 Applying equilibrium gives
0 0
     
 y g g
F T F T F
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Equilibrium, Example 2
 A traffic light weighing 100 N hangs from a vertical cable
tied to two other cables that are fastened to a support.
The upper cables make angles of 37° and 53° with the
horizontal. Find the tension in each of the three cables.
 Conceptualize the traffic light
 Assume cables don’t break
 Nothing is moving
 Categorize as an equilibrium problem
 No movement, so acceleration is zero
 Model as an object in equilibrium
0

 x
F 0

 y
F
Feb. 11-15, 2013
Equilibrium, Example 2
 Need 2 free-body diagrams
 Apply equilibrium equation to light
 Apply equilibrium equations to knot
N
F
T
F
T
F
g
g
y
100
0
0
3
3







N
F
T
F
T
F
g
g
y
100
0
0
3
3







N
T
T
N
T
T
T
T
N
T
T
T
T
T
F
T
T
T
T
F
y
y
y
y
x
x
x
80
33
.
1
60
33
.
1
53
cos
37
cos
0
100
53
sin
37
sin
0
53
cos
37
cos
1
2
1
1
1
2
2
1
3
2
1
2
1
2
1


































Feb. 11-15, 2013
Accelerating Objects
 If an object that can be modeled as a particle
experiences an acceleration, there must be a
nonzero net force acting on it
 Draw a free-body diagram
 Apply Newton’s Second Law in component form
a
m
F




x
x ma
F 
 y
y ma
F 

Feb. 11-15, 2013
Accelerating Objects, Example 1
 A man weighs himself with a scale in an elevator. While
the elevator is at rest, he measures a weight of 800 N.
 What weight does the scale read if the elevator accelerates
upward at 2.0 m/s2? a = 2.0 m/s2
 What weight does the scale read if the elevator accelerates
downward at 2.0 m/s2? a = - 2.0 m/s2
 Upward:
 Downward:
ma
mg
N
Fy 



mg
N
N
80
m/s
8
.
9
N
800
)
(
2







g
w
m
a
g
m
ma
mg
N
mg
N 
N
624
)
8
.
9
0
.
2
(
80 



N
mg
N  mg
N
N
624
)
8
.
9
0
.
2
(
80 


N

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Phys111_lecture04.ppt

  • 1. Physics 111: Mechanics Lecture 4 Dale Gary NJIT Physics Department
  • 2. Feb. 11-15, 2013 The Laws of Motion  Newton’s first law  Force  Mass  Newton’s second law  Newton’s third law  Examples Isaac Newton’s work represents one of the greatest contributions to science ever made by an individual.
  • 3. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Dynamics  Describes the relationship between the motion of objects in our everyday world and the forces acting on them  Language of Dynamics  Force: The measure of interaction between two objects (pull or push). It is a vector quantity – it has a magnitude and direction  Mass: The measure of how difficult it is to change object’s velocity (sluggishness or inertia of the object)
  • 4. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Forces  The measure of interaction between two objects (pull or push)  Vector quantity: has magnitude and direction  May be a contact force or a field force  Contact forces result from physical contact between two objects  Field forces act between disconnected objects  Also called “action at a distance”
  • 5. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Forces  Gravitational Force  Archimedes Force  Friction Force  Tension Force  Spring Force  Normal Force
  • 6. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Vector Nature of Force  Vector force: has magnitude and direction  Net Force: a resultant force acting on object  You must use the rules of vector addition to obtain the net force on an object ...... 3 2 1       F F F F Fnet      2 2 1 2 1 1 2 | | 2.24 N tan ( ) 26.6 F F F F F        
  • 7. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Newton’s First Law  An object at rest tends to stay at rest and an object in motion tends to stay in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by an unbalanced force  An object at rest remains at rest as long as no net force acts on it  An object moving with constant velocity continues to move with the same speed and in the same direction (the same velocity) as long as no net force acts on it  “Keep on doing what it is doing”
  • 8. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Newton’s First Law  An object at rest tends to stay at rest and an object in motion tends to stay in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by an unbalanced force  When forces are balanced, the acceleration of the object is zero  Object at rest: v = 0 and a = 0  Object in motion: v  0 and a = 0  The net force is defined as the vector sum of all the external forces exerted on the object. If the net force is zero, forces are balanced. When forces are balances, the object can be stationary, or move with constant velocity.
  • 9. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Mass and Inertia  Every object continues in its state of rest, or uniform motion in a straight line, unless it is compelled to change that state by unbalanced forces impressed upon it  Inertia is a property of objects to resist changes is motion!  Mass is a measure of the amount of inertia.  Mass is a measure of the resistance of an object to changes in its velocity  Mass is an inherent property of an object  Scalar quantity and SI unit: kg
  • 10. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Newton’s Second Law  The acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the net force acting on it and inversely proportional to its mass m F m F a net       a m F Fnet      
  • 11. Feb. 11-15, 2013  Newton’s second law:  SI unit of force is a Newton (N)  US Customary unit of force is a pound (lb)  1 N = 0.225 lb  Weight, also measured in lbs. is a force (mass x acceleration). What is the acceleration in that case? Units of Force 2 s m kg 1 N 1  a m F Fnet      
  • 12. Feb. 11-15, 2013 More about Newton’s 2nd Law  You must be certain about which body we are applying it to  Fnet must be the vector sum of all the forces that act on that body  Only forces that act on that body are to be included in the vector sum  Net force component along an axis gives rise to the acceleration along that same axis x x net ma F  , y y net ma F  ,
  • 13. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Sample Problem  One or two forces act on a puck that moves over frictionless ice along an x axis, in one-dimensional motion. The puck's mass is m = 0.20 kg. Forces F1 and F2 and are directed along the x axis and have magnitudes F1 = 4.0 N and F2 = 2.0 N. Force F3 is directed at angle  = 30° and has magnitude F3 = 1.0 N. In each situation, what is the acceleration of the puck? x x net ma F  , 2 1 1 m/s 20 kg 2 . 0 N 0 . 4 )     m F a ma F a x x 2 2 1 2 1 m/s 10 kg 2 . 0 N 0 . 2 N 0 . 4 )        m F F a ma F F b x x 2 2 3 3 , 3 2 , 3 m/s 7 . 5 kg 2 . 0 N 0 . 2 30 cos N 0 . 1 cos cos )           m F F a F F ma F F c x x x x  
  • 14. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Gravitational Force  Gravitational force is a vector  Expressed by Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation:  G – gravitational constant  M – mass of the Earth  m – mass of an object  R – radius of the Earth  Direction: pointing downward 2 R mM G Fg 
  • 15. Feb. 11-15, 2013  The magnitude of the gravitational force acting on an object of mass m near the Earth’s surface is called the weight w of the object: w = mg  g can also be found from the Law of Universal Gravitation  Weight has a unit of N  Weight depends upon location Weight mg F w g   R = 6,400 km 2 2 m/s 8 . 9   R M G g 2 R mM G Fg 
  • 16. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Normal Force  Force from a solid surface which keeps object from falling through  Direction: always perpendicular to the surface  Magnitude: depends on situation mg F w g   y g ma F N   mg N  y ma mg N  
  • 17. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Tension Force: T  A taut rope exerts forces on whatever holds its ends  Direction: always along the cord (rope, cable, string ……) and away from the object  Magnitude: depend on situation T1 T2 T1 = T = T2
  • 18. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Newton’s Third Law  If object 1 and object 2 interact, the force exerted by object 1 on object 2 is equal in magnitude but opposite in direction to the force exerted by object 2 on object 1  Equivalent to saying a single isolated force cannot exist B on A on F F    
  • 19. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Newton’s Third Law cont.  F12 may be called the action force and F21 the reaction force  Actually, either force can be the action or the reaction force  The action and reaction forces act on different objects
  • 20. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Some Action-Reaction Pairs 2 R mM G Fg  2 R mM G Fg  2 R Gm M Ma Fg   2 R GM m mg Fg  
  • 21. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Free Body Diagram  The most important step in solving problems involving Newton’s Laws is to draw the free body diagram  Be sure to include only the forces acting on the object of interest  Include any field forces acting on the object  Do not assume the normal force equals the weight F hand on book F Earth on book
  • 22. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Hints for Problem-Solving  Read the problem carefully at least once  Draw a picture of the system, identify the object of primary interest, and indicate forces with arrows  Label each force in the picture in a way that will bring to mind what physical quantity the label stands for (e.g., T for tension)  Draw a free-body diagram of the object of interest, based on the labeled picture. If additional objects are involved, draw separate free-body diagram for them  Choose a convenient coordinate system for each object  Apply Newton’s second law. The x- and y-components of Newton second law should be taken from the vector equation and written individually. This often results in two equations and two unknowns  Solve for the desired unknown quantity, and substitute the numbers x x net ma F  , y y net ma F  ,
  • 23. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Objects in Equilibrium  Objects that are either at rest or moving with constant velocity are said to be in equilibrium  Acceleration of an object can be modeled as zero:  Mathematically, the net force acting on the object is zero  Equivalent to the set of component equations given by 0  F  0  a  0   x F 0   y F
  • 24. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Equilibrium, Example 1  A lamp is suspended from a chain of negligible mass  The forces acting on the lamp are  the downward force of gravity  the upward tension in the chain  Applying equilibrium gives 0 0        y g g F T F T F
  • 25. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Equilibrium, Example 2  A traffic light weighing 100 N hangs from a vertical cable tied to two other cables that are fastened to a support. The upper cables make angles of 37° and 53° with the horizontal. Find the tension in each of the three cables.  Conceptualize the traffic light  Assume cables don’t break  Nothing is moving  Categorize as an equilibrium problem  No movement, so acceleration is zero  Model as an object in equilibrium 0   x F 0   y F
  • 26. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Equilibrium, Example 2  Need 2 free-body diagrams  Apply equilibrium equation to light  Apply equilibrium equations to knot N F T F T F g g y 100 0 0 3 3        N F T F T F g g y 100 0 0 3 3        N T T N T T T T N T T T T T F T T T T F y y y y x x x 80 33 . 1 60 33 . 1 53 cos 37 cos 0 100 53 sin 37 sin 0 53 cos 37 cos 1 2 1 1 1 2 2 1 3 2 1 2 1 2 1                                  
  • 27. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Accelerating Objects  If an object that can be modeled as a particle experiences an acceleration, there must be a nonzero net force acting on it  Draw a free-body diagram  Apply Newton’s Second Law in component form a m F     x x ma F   y y ma F  
  • 28. Feb. 11-15, 2013 Accelerating Objects, Example 1  A man weighs himself with a scale in an elevator. While the elevator is at rest, he measures a weight of 800 N.  What weight does the scale read if the elevator accelerates upward at 2.0 m/s2? a = 2.0 m/s2  What weight does the scale read if the elevator accelerates downward at 2.0 m/s2? a = - 2.0 m/s2  Upward:  Downward: ma mg N Fy     mg N N 80 m/s 8 . 9 N 800 ) ( 2        g w m a g m ma mg N mg N  N 624 ) 8 . 9 0 . 2 ( 80     N mg N  mg N N 624 ) 8 . 9 0 . 2 ( 80    N