P11 (Force And Pressure) Flashcards
4 Stages of investigating springs exsperiment
1) Measure the natural length of the spring, using a clamped stand with a millimetre ruler at eye level
2) Add a mass to the spring and allow it to rest. Record the new length and the extension is the change in length
3) repeat with different masses
4) plot a force-extension graph
Straight line in force-extension graph
- force and extension are directly proportional
- gradient = spring constant
Curve in the force-extension graph
- non linear relationship as it stretches more for each unit of force
- exceeding limit of proportionality
Elastic potential energy (J) =
0.5 x Spring Constant(N/M) x extension^2 (M)
Pressure
- force applied in a given area
- exert force as the collide with other surfaces
2 things pressure in liquids depend on
- density as more particles in a certain space which means an increase in collisions
- depth as there are more particles and the weight increases
2 pressure (Pa) formulas
= Force (N) / Area (M^2)
= Height(M) x Gravitational FS (N/Kg) x density (Kg/M^3)
Upthrust
- pressure exerted on object submerged
- increase depth means increased force and is more than the force from the top
- creates a resultant force
Floating
- when the upthrust is equal to the objects weight
- object less dense displaces equal fluid to the weight
Sinking
- higher density
- fluid unable to displace the weight of the object
- weight higher than the upthrust
How submarines work
- to sink fill water tanks so weight is more than upthrust
- to rise fill tanks with compressed air so more upthrust
Effect of height on atmospheric pressure
higher altitudes atmosphere is less dense as fewer molecules are colliding with the surface