chapter 4/5 Forces Flashcards
Increase in mass provides a ________ acceleration
smaller
Newton’s second law (equation)
F=ma
2 kinds of forces
Contact force: forces that act on an object by touching it at a point of contact
Long-range forces: forces that act on an object without physical contact
4 fundamental forces (weakest to strongest)
- gravity- has the largest field of influence, equation: FG=m1m2/r^2 (G=6.67(10^-11), m1= mass of kg, m2=other object, r= how far away they are from each other)
- electromagnetic force- occur between any two charged particles, causing an attraction between particles with opposite charges and repulsion between particles with the same charge, equation= FE= kq1q2/r^2 (k= Coulomb’s constant, q1= # of protons or electrons, q2= charge, r=distance between charges)
- Weak force- regulates atomic decay
- strong nuclear force- keeps protons together
8 derived forces
- push- FP
- pull/tension- FT
- normal- FN - perpendicular up
- friction- FF - sliding force, due to properties of objects contact, static friction- nothing is moving but its trying to, kinetic- moving/sliding, rolling- rolling wheel
- weight- FW, FW=mg, points to center of object
- buoyant- FB=weight of fluid displaced, air is a fluid, FB=pVg (p=density, v=volume, g=gravity)
- adhesive- 2 unlike things
- cohesive- attracted to itself
centripetal
walking toward center/middle, force responsible for making things move toward middle, not a force on its own- always supplied by something else (another force)
spring restoring force
when pulled- goes back/ when compressed- pushes back
centrifugal
-fictitious force, usually is just internal (not a force)
Hooke’s Law
Fs= -kx
(spring force (y)= -spring constant (how strong spring is) x
Newton’s first law
an object with no net force acting on it moves with a constant velocity
- also called law of inertia
- inertia: property of matter where is resists all changes in its state of motion
Newtons second law
a=F/m
-more f more a
- a is directly proportional to F
- a is directly proportional to 1/m
net force and acceleration…
go the same direction
newtons third law
when 1 object exerts a force on a 2nd object, the 2nd object exerts a force on the the 1st that is equal in magnitude and opposite in direction
-every action has an equal and opposite reaction
- F=ma
center of mass/gravity
-where you can assume all the mass is in an object- at the balance point
-center of mass does not have to be on an object, it can be in air
what do bathroom scales measure?
normal force, not weight