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Chapter 4 Forces and Newton’s Laws of Motion

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Page 1: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

Chapter 4

Forces and Newton’s Laws of Motion

Page 2: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass

A force is a push or a pull.

Contact forces arise from physicalcontact .

Action-at-a-distance forces do notrequire contact and include gravity and electrical forces.

Page 3: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass

Arrows are used to represent forces. The length of the arrowis proportional to the magnitude of the force.

15 N

5 N

Page 4: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass

Mass is a measure of the amount of “stuff” contained in an object.

Page 5: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.2 Newton’s First Law of Motion

An object continues in a state of restor in a state of motion at a constant speed along a straight line, unless compelled to change that state by a net force.

The net force is the vector sum of allof the forces acting on an object.

Newton’s First Law

Page 6: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.2 Newton’s First Law of Motion

The net force on an object is the vector sum of all forces acting on that object.

The SI unit of force is the Newton (N).

Individual Forces Net Force

10 N4 N 6 N

Page 7: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.2 Newton’s First Law of Motion

Individual Forces Net Force

3 N

4 N

5 N64

Page 8: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.2 Newton’s First Law of Motion

Inertia is the natural tendency of anobject to remain at rest in motion ata constant speed along a straight line.

The mass of an object is a quantitativemeasure of inertia.

SI Unit of Mass: kilogram (kg)

Page 9: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.2 Newton’s First Law of Motion

An inertial reference frame is one in which Newton’s law of inertia is valid.

All accelerating reference frames arenoninertial.

Page 10: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

F

Mathematically, the net force is written as

where the Greek letter sigma denotes the vector sum.

Page 11: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

Newton’s Second Law

When a net external force acts on an objectof mass m, the acceleration that results is directly proportional to the net force and hasa magnitude that is inversely proportional tothe mass. The direction of the acceleration isthe same as the direction of the net force.

mF

a

aF

m

Page 12: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

SI Unit for Force

22 s

mkg

s

mkg

This combination of units is called a newton (N).

Page 13: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

Page 14: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

A free-body-diagram is a diagram that represents the object and the forces that act on it.

Page 15: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

The net force in this case is:

275 N + 395 N – 560 N = +110 N

and is directed along the + x axis of the coordinate system.

Page 16: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.3 Newton’s Second Law of Motion

If the mass of the car is 1850 kg then, by Newton’s second law, the acceleration is

2sm059.0kg 1850

N110

m

Fa

Page 17: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.4 The Vector Nature of Newton’s Second Law

xx maFyy maF

The direction of force and acceleration vectorscan be taken into account by using x and ycomponents.

aFm

is equivalent to

Page 18: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.4 The Vector Nature of Newton’s Second Law

xx maFyy maF

aFm

The direction of force and acceleration vectorscan be taken into account by using x and ycomponents.

is equivalent to

Page 19: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

Example

3.  In the amusement park ride known as Magic Mountain Superman, powerful magnets accelerate a car and its riders from rest to 45 m/s (about 100 mi/h) in a time of 7.0 s. The mass of the car and riders is . Find the average net force exerted on the car and riders by the magnets.

Page 20: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

Example

• 6.  Interactive LearningWare 4.1 at www.wiley.com/college/cutnell reviews the approach taken in problems such as this one. A 1580-kg car is traveling with a speed of 15.0 m/s. What is the magnitude of the horizontal net force that is required to bring the car to a halt in a distance of 50.0 m?

Page 21: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.4 The Vector Nature of Newton’s Second Law

Page 22: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.4 The Vector Nature of Newton’s Second Law

Force x component y component

+17 N

+(15 N) cos67

0 N

+(15 N) sin67

+23 N +14 N

The net force on the raft can be calculatedin the following way:

P

A

Page 23: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.4 The Vector Nature of Newton’s Second Law

2sm 018.0kg 1300

N 23

m

Fa

x

x

2sm 011.0kg 1300

N 14

m

Fa

y

y

Page 24: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.5 Newton’s Third Law of Motion

Newton’s Third Law of Motion

Whenever one body exerts a force on a second body, the second body exerts an oppositely directed force of equal magnitude on the first body.

Page 25: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.5 Newton’s Third Law of Motion

Suppose that the magnitude of the force is 36 N. If the massof the spacecraft is 11,000 kg and the mass of the astronautis 92 kg, what are the accelerations?

Page 26: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.5 Newton’s Third Law of Motion

.astronaut On the

. spacecraft On the

PF

PF

2sm0033.0kg 11,000

N 36

ss m

Pa

2sm39.0kg 92

N 36

AA m

Pa

Page 27: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.6 Types of Forces: An Overview

In nature there are two general types of forces,fundamental and nonfundamental.

Fundamental Forces

1. Gravitational force

2. Strong Nuclear force

3. Electroweak force

Page 28: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.6 Types of Forces: An Overview

Examples of nonfundamental forces:

friction

tension in a rope

normal or support forces

Page 29: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.7 The Gravitational Force

Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation

Every particle in the universe exerts an attractive force on everyother particle.

A particle is a piece of matter, small enough in size to be regarded as a mathematical point.

The force that each exerts on the other is directed along the linejoining the particles.

Page 30: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.7 The Gravitational Force

For two particles that have masses m1 and m2 and are separated by a distance r, the force has a magnitude given by

221

r

mmGF

2211 kgmN10673.6 G

Page 31: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.7 The Gravitational Force

N 104.1

m 1.2

kg 25kg 12kgmN1067.6

8

22211

221

r

mmGF

Page 32: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.7 The Gravitational Force

Page 33: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.7 The Gravitational Force

Definition of Weight

The weight of an object on or above the earth is the gravitational force that the earth exerts on the object. The weight always acts downwards, toward the center of the earth.

On or above another astronomical body, the weight is the gravitational force exerted on the object by that body.

SI Unit of Weight: newton (N)

Page 34: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

Example

• 18.  On earth, two parts of a space probe weigh 11 000 N and 3400 N. These parts are separated by a center-to-center distance of 12 m and may be treated as uniform spherical objects. Find the magnitude of the gravitational force that each part exerts on the other out in space, far from any other objects.

Page 35: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.7 The Gravitational Force

Relation Between Mass and Weight

2r

mMGW E

mgW

2r

MGg E

Page 36: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.7 The Gravitational Force

2

26

242211

2

sm 80.9

m 106.38

kg 1098.5kgmN1067.6

E

E

R

MGg

On the earth’s surface:

Page 37: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

Example

• 26.  A space traveler weighs 540 N on earth. What will the traveler weigh on another planet whose radius is three times that of earth and whose mass is twice that of earth?

Page 38: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.8 The Normal Force

Definition of the Normal Force

The normal force is one component of the force that a surfaceexerts on an object with which it is in contact – namely, thecomponent that is perpendicular to the surface.

Page 39: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.8 The Normal Force

N 26

0N 15N 11

N

N

F

F

N 4

0N 15N 11

N

N

F

F

Page 40: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

Example

• 34.  A 35-kg crate rests on a horizontal floor, and a 65-kg person is standing on the crate. Determine the magnitude of the normal force that (a) the floor exerts on the crate and (b) the crate exerts on the person.

Page 41: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.8 The Normal Force

Apparent Weight

The apparent weight of an object is the reading of the scale.

It is equal to the normal force the man exerts on the scale.

Page 42: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.8 The Normal Force

mamgFF Ny

mamgFN

apparent weight

trueweight

Page 43: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

Example

• 36.  A 95.0-kg person stands on a scale in an elevator. What is the apparent weight when the elevator is (a) accelerating upward with an acceleration of 1.80 m/s2, (b) moving upward at a constant speed, and (c) accelerating downward with an acceleration of 1.30 m/s2?

Page 44: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.9 Static and Kinetic Frictional Forces

When an object is in contact with a surface there is a forceacting on that object. The component of this force that is parallel to the surface is called the frictional force.

Page 45: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.9 Static and Kinetic Frictional Forces

When the two surfaces are not sliding across one anotherthe friction is called static friction.

Page 46: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.9 Static and Kinetic Frictional Forces

The magnitude of the static frictional force can have any valuefrom zero up to a maximum value.

MAXss ff

NsMAXs Ff

10 s is called the coefficient of static friction.

Page 47: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.9 Static and Kinetic Frictional Forces

Note that the magnitude of the frictional force doesnot depend on the contact area of the surfaces.

Page 48: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.9 Static and Kinetic Frictional Forces

Static friction opposes the impending relative motion betweentwo objects.

Kinetic friction opposes the relative sliding motion motions thatactually does occur.

Nkk Ff

10 s is called the coefficient of kinetic friction.

Page 49: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.9 Static and Kinetic Frictional Forces

Page 50: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.9 Static and Kinetic Frictional Forces

The sled comes to a halt because the kinetic frictional forceopposes its motion and causes the sled to slow down.

Page 51: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.9 Static and Kinetic Frictional Forces

Suppose the coefficient of kinetic friction is 0.05 and the total mass is 40kg. What is the kinetic frictional force?

kg20sm80.9kg4005.0 2

mgFf kNkk

Page 52: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

Example

• 39.  ssm A 60.0-kg crate rests on a level floor at a shipping dock. The coefficients of static and kinetic friction are 0.760 and 0.410, respectively. What horizontal pushing force is required to (a) just start the crate moving and (b) slide the crate across the dock at a constant speed?

Page 53: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.10 The Tension Force

Cables and ropes transmit forces through tension.

Page 54: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.10 The Tension Force

A massless rope will transmittension undiminished from oneend to the other.

If the rope passes around amassless, frictionless pulley, thetension will be transmitted tothe other end of the ropeundiminished.

Page 55: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.11 Equilibrium Application of Newton’s Laws of Motion

Definition of EquilibriumAn object is in equilibrium when it has zero acceleration.

0xF

0yF

Page 56: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.11 Equilibrium Application of Newton’s Laws of Motion

Reasoning Strategy

• Select an object(s) to which the equations of equilibrium are to be applied.

• Draw a free-body diagram for each object chosen above. Include only forces acting on the object, not forces the objectexerts on its environment.

• Choose a set of x, y axes for each object and resolve all forcesin the free-body diagram into components that point along theseaxes.

• Apply the equations and solve for the unknown quantities.

Page 57: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.11 Equilibrium Application of Newton’s Laws of Motion

035sin35sin 21 TT

035cos35cos 21 FTT

Page 58: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.11 Equilibrium Application of Newton’s Laws of Motion

Page 59: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.11 Equilibrium Application of Newton’s Laws of Motion

N 3150W

Force x component y component

1T

2T

W

0.10sin1T

0.80sin2T

0

0.10cos1T

0.80cos2T

W

Page 60: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.11 Equilibrium Application of Newton’s Laws of Motion

00.80sin0.10sin 21 TTFx

00.80cos0.10cos 21 WTTFy

The first equation gives 21 0.10sin

0.80sinTT

Substitution into the second gives

00.80cos0.10cos0.10sin

0.80sin22

WTT

Page 61: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.11 Equilibrium Application of Newton’s Laws of Motion

0.80cos0.10cos0.10sin0.80sin

2

WT

N 5822 T N 1030.3 31 T

Page 62: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.12 Nonequilibrium Application of Newton’s Laws of Motion

xx maF

yy maF

When an object is accelerating, it is not in equilibrium.

Page 63: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.12 Nonequilibrium Application of Newton’s Laws of Motion

The acceleration is along the x axis so 0ya

Page 64: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.12 Nonequilibrium Application of Newton’s Laws of Motion

Force x component y component

1T

2T

D

R

0.30cos1T

0.30cos2T

0

0

D

R

0.30sin1T

0.30sin2T

Page 65: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.12 Nonequilibrium Application of Newton’s Laws of Motion

00.30sin0.30sin 21 TTFy

21 TT

x

x

ma

RDTTF

0.30cos0.30cos 21

Page 66: Chapter 4 Forces and Newtons Laws of Motion. 4.1 The Concepts of Force and Mass A force is a push or a pull. Contact forces arise from physical contact

4.12 Nonequilibrium Application of Newton’s Laws of Motion

TTT 21

N 1053.10.30cos2

5

DRmaT x