Newton's Laws of Motion
Newton's Laws of Motion
Newton's Laws of Motion
Laws of
Motion
Sir Isaac Newton
The motion of an aircraft through the air
can be explained and described by
physical principals discovered over 300
years ago by Sir Isaac Newton. Newton
worked in many areas of mathematics
and physics. He developed the theories
of gravitation in 1666, when he was only
23 years old. Some twenty years later, in
1686, he presented his three laws of
motion in the "Principia Mathematica
Philosophiae Naturalis."
Newton’s Laws of Motion
1st Law
An object at rest will stay at rest, and
an object in motion will stay in motion at
constant velocity, unless acted upon by an
unbalanced force.
2nd Law
Force equals mass times acceleration.
3rd Law
For every action there is an equal and
opposite reaction.
1st Law of Motion
(Law of Inertia)
Symbol fs fk
opposite direction
opposite direction of
Direction of applied force or
object's motion
impending motion
Magnitude sN kN
Normal
Force FN
Applied
Force F
Friction
Force ff
Gravity
Force Fg
Fg = mg
FN = F g
ff = F
Once the Force of Static
Friction is overcome, the
Force of Kinetic Friction
is what slows down a
moving object! Motion
FN
F
fk
Fg
f k FN k
k coefficient of kinetic friction
The Force of Static
Friction keeps a
stationary object at
rest!
FN
F
fs
Fg
f s FN s
s coefficient of static friction
Exercise on Friction
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/N2st.html#c1
When mass is in kilograms and
acceleration is in m/s/s, the unit of force
is in newton (N).
One newton is equal to the force
required to accelerate one kilogram of
mass at one meter/second/second.
1 N = 1kg*m/s2
2nd Law (F = ma)
How much force is needed to accelerate a 1400
kilogram car 2 m/s2?
Write the formula
F = ma
Fill in given numbers and units
F = (1400 kg)(2 m/s2)
Solve for the unknown
2800 kg-m/s2 or 2800 N
If mass remains constant, doubling the acceleration, doubles the force. If
force remains constant, doubling the mass, halves the acceleration.
Newton’s 2nd Law proves that different
masses accelerate to the earth at the same
rate, but with different forces.
F = ma F = ma
98 N = 10 kg x 9.8 m/s2 9.8 N = 1 kg x 9.8 m/s2
Newton’s
Falling
Apple???
Check Your Understanding
1. What acceleration will result when a 12 N net force
applied to a 3 kg object?
Answer: 12 N = 3 kg x 4 m/s2
2. A net force of 16 N causes a mass to accelerate at
a rate of 5 m/s2. Determine the mass.
Answer: 16 N = 3.2 kg x 5 m/s2
3. How much force is needed to accelerate a 66 kg
skier 1 m/sec/sec?
Answer: 66 kg-m/s2 or 66 N
4. What is the force on a 1000 kg elevator that is
falling freely at 9.8 m/sec/sec?
Answer: 9800 kg-m/s2 or 9800 N
TYPES OF FORCES
1. Contact forces - occur when objects touch
each other.
Examples of contact forces include pushing a
crate (applied force), pulling a wagon
(tension force), a frictional force slowing
down your sled, or even the force of air
accelerating a spitward through a straw.
2. Field forces - also known as non-contact
forces, occur at a distance.
Examples of field forces include the
gravitational force, the magnetic force,
and the electrical force between two
charged objects.
3rd Law of Motion
FA 19.6 N
a 1.96m / s 2
m 10kg
v f vi 0 5m / s
t 2.55s
a 1.96m / s 2
Problem 2:
A 12kg box is released from the top of an
incline that is 5m long and makes an angle of
40º to the horizontal. A 60N friction force
impedes the motion of the box. How long will
it take the box to reach the bottom of the
incline?
Wx F f ma
2d 2(5m)
t 2
2.8s
a 1.3m / s
Assignment: