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Newton’s Laws of
Motion
Force
 Two types of forces
 Contact force
 Force caused by physical contact
 Field force
 Force caused by gravitational attraction
between two objects
Isaac Newton
 Born 1642
 Went to University of Cambridge in England as
a student and taught there as a professor after
 Never married
 Gave his attention mostly to physics and
mathematics, but he also gave his attention to
religion and alchemy
 Newton was the first to solve three mysteries
that intrigued the scientists
 Laws of Motion
 Laws of Planetary Orbits
 Calculus
Three Laws of Motion
 Newton’s Laws of Motion are laws
discovered by Physicist and
mathematician, Isaac Newton, that
explains the objects’ motions depending
on forces acted on them
 Newton’s First Law: Law of Inertia
 Newton’s Second Law: Law of Resultant
Force
 Newton’s Third Law: Law of Reciprocal
Action
Newton’s First Law
 An Object at rest remains at rest, and an
object in motion continues in motion with
constant velocity (that is, constant speed
in a straight line), unless it experiences a
net external force.
 The tendency to resist change in motion
is called inertia
 People believed that all moving objects
would eventually stop before Newton came
up with his laws
Friction
 A force that causes resistance to motion
 Arises from contact between two
surfaces
 If the force applied is smaller than the
friction, then the object will not move
 If the object is not moving, then ffriction=Fapplied
 The object eventually slips when the
applied force is big enough
Friction
 Friction was discovered by
Galileo Galilee when he
rolled a ball down a slope
and observed that the ball
rolls up the opposite slope to
about the same height, and
concluded that the
difference between the initial
height and the final height is
caused by friction.
 Galileo also noticed that the
ball would roll almost forever
on a flat surface so that the
ball can elevate to the same
height as where it started.
Two types of Friction
 Static Friction
 Friction that exists
while the object is
stationary
 If the applied force on
an object becomes
greater than the
maximum of static
friction, then the object
starts moving
 fstatic≤μstaticn
 Kinetic Friction
 The friction that exists
when an object is in
motion
 F-fkinetic produces
acceleration to the
direction the object is
moving
 If F=fkinetic, then the object
moves at constant speed
with no acceleration
 fkinetic= μkineticn
 Kinetic friction and the
coefficient of kinetic
friction are smaller than
static friction and the
static coefficient
Newton’s First Law
 When there is no force
exerted on an object, the
motion of the object remains
the same like described in
the diagram
 Because the equation of
Force is F=ma, the
acceleration is 0m/s². So
the equation is
0N=m*0m/s²
 Therefore, force is not
needed to keep the object
in motion, when
 The object is in
equilibrium when it does
not change its state of
motion
The car is traveling rightward
and crashes into a brick wall.
The brick wall acts as an
unbalanced force and stops
the car.
The truck stops when it
crashes into the red car.
But the ladder falls in front
of the truck because the
ladder was in motion with
the truck but there is
nothing stopping the
ladder when the truck
stops.
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
Fnet
Acceleration
Unbalanced Force and
Acceleration
 Force is equal to
acceleration multiplied by
mass
 When an unbalanced
force acts on an object,
there is always an
acceleration
 Acceleration differs
depending on the
net force
 The acceleration is
inversely related to
the mass of the
object
Net Force
 Force is a vector
 Because it is a vector, the net force can be
determined by subtracting the force that
resists motion from the force applied to the
object.
 If the force is applied at an angle, then
trigonometry is used to find the force
Fnet
θ
R
R*cos θ
R*sin θ
θ
R
Gravitational Force
 The force that exerts all objects toward
the earth’s surface is called a
gravitational force.
 The magnitude of the gravitational force is
called weight
 The acceleration due to gravity is
different in each location, but 9.80m/s² is
most commonly used
 Calculated with formula w=mg
Newton’s Third Law
 If two objects interact, the force exerted
on object 1 by object 2 is equal in
magnitude but opposite in direction to
the force exerted on object 2 by object 1
 Forces always come in pair when two
objects interact
 The forces are equal, but opposite in
direction
Fg
Fn
As the man jumps off
the boat, he exerts
the force on the boat
and the boat exerts
the reaction force on
the man.
The man leaps forward
onto the pier, while the
boat moves away from
the pier.
Newton’s Third Law
Force exerted by the wheels
Force exerted by the road
Newton’s Third Law
Newton’s Third Law
Flow
backward
Foil deflected
down
Foil deflected
up
Engine pushed
forward
Flow pushed backward
Foil deflected
down
Newtons laws

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Newtons laws

  • 2. Force  Two types of forces  Contact force  Force caused by physical contact  Field force  Force caused by gravitational attraction between two objects
  • 3. Isaac Newton  Born 1642  Went to University of Cambridge in England as a student and taught there as a professor after  Never married  Gave his attention mostly to physics and mathematics, but he also gave his attention to religion and alchemy  Newton was the first to solve three mysteries that intrigued the scientists  Laws of Motion  Laws of Planetary Orbits  Calculus
  • 4. Three Laws of Motion  Newton’s Laws of Motion are laws discovered by Physicist and mathematician, Isaac Newton, that explains the objects’ motions depending on forces acted on them  Newton’s First Law: Law of Inertia  Newton’s Second Law: Law of Resultant Force  Newton’s Third Law: Law of Reciprocal Action
  • 5. Newton’s First Law  An Object at rest remains at rest, and an object in motion continues in motion with constant velocity (that is, constant speed in a straight line), unless it experiences a net external force.  The tendency to resist change in motion is called inertia  People believed that all moving objects would eventually stop before Newton came up with his laws
  • 6. Friction  A force that causes resistance to motion  Arises from contact between two surfaces  If the force applied is smaller than the friction, then the object will not move  If the object is not moving, then ffriction=Fapplied  The object eventually slips when the applied force is big enough
  • 7. Friction  Friction was discovered by Galileo Galilee when he rolled a ball down a slope and observed that the ball rolls up the opposite slope to about the same height, and concluded that the difference between the initial height and the final height is caused by friction.  Galileo also noticed that the ball would roll almost forever on a flat surface so that the ball can elevate to the same height as where it started.
  • 8. Two types of Friction  Static Friction  Friction that exists while the object is stationary  If the applied force on an object becomes greater than the maximum of static friction, then the object starts moving  fstatic≤μstaticn  Kinetic Friction  The friction that exists when an object is in motion  F-fkinetic produces acceleration to the direction the object is moving  If F=fkinetic, then the object moves at constant speed with no acceleration  fkinetic= μkineticn  Kinetic friction and the coefficient of kinetic friction are smaller than static friction and the static coefficient
  • 9.
  • 10. Newton’s First Law  When there is no force exerted on an object, the motion of the object remains the same like described in the diagram  Because the equation of Force is F=ma, the acceleration is 0m/s². So the equation is 0N=m*0m/s²  Therefore, force is not needed to keep the object in motion, when  The object is in equilibrium when it does not change its state of motion
  • 11. The car is traveling rightward and crashes into a brick wall. The brick wall acts as an unbalanced force and stops the car.
  • 12. The truck stops when it crashes into the red car. But the ladder falls in front of the truck because the ladder was in motion with the truck but there is nothing stopping the ladder when the truck stops.
  • 13. 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 Fnet Acceleration
  • 14. Unbalanced Force and Acceleration  Force is equal to acceleration multiplied by mass  When an unbalanced force acts on an object, there is always an acceleration  Acceleration differs depending on the net force  The acceleration is inversely related to the mass of the object
  • 15. Net Force  Force is a vector  Because it is a vector, the net force can be determined by subtracting the force that resists motion from the force applied to the object.  If the force is applied at an angle, then trigonometry is used to find the force Fnet
  • 17. Gravitational Force  The force that exerts all objects toward the earth’s surface is called a gravitational force.  The magnitude of the gravitational force is called weight  The acceleration due to gravity is different in each location, but 9.80m/s² is most commonly used  Calculated with formula w=mg
  • 18. Newton’s Third Law  If two objects interact, the force exerted on object 1 by object 2 is equal in magnitude but opposite in direction to the force exerted on object 2 by object 1  Forces always come in pair when two objects interact  The forces are equal, but opposite in direction Fg Fn
  • 19. As the man jumps off the boat, he exerts the force on the boat and the boat exerts the reaction force on the man. The man leaps forward onto the pier, while the boat moves away from the pier. Newton’s Third Law
  • 20. Force exerted by the wheels Force exerted by the road Newton’s Third Law
  • 21. Newton’s Third Law Flow backward Foil deflected down Foil deflected up Engine pushed forward Flow pushed backward Foil deflected down