P5 Newton's First and Second Laws (page 211) Flashcards

1
Q

In the 1660’s what was the name of the person who worked out useful ‘laws of motion’?

A

Isaac Newton.

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2
Q

What is Newton’s First Law?

A

newton’s first law says that a resultant force (p.203) is needed to make something start moving, speed up or slow down:

If the resultant force on a stationary object is zero, the object will remain stationary. If the resultant force on a moving object is zero, it’ll just carry on moving at the same velocity (same speed and direction).

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3
Q

When a train or car or bus or anything else is moving at a constant velocity what must the resistive and friving forces on it be?

A

they must all be balanced. The velocity will only change if there’s a non-zero resultant force acting on the object.

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4
Q

A non-zero resultant force will alway produce what? and what direction?

A

it will always produce acceleration (or deceleration) in the direction of the force.

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5
Q

The acceleration can take five different forms, what are they?

A

starting, stopping, speeding up, slowing down and changing direction.

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6
Q

On a free body diagram, will the arrows be equal or unequal? (see diagram on page 211)

A

will be unequal

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7
Q

A force is needed to change what?

A

Motion

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8
Q

Acceleration is Proportional to what?

A

the Resultant Force.

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9
Q

The larger the resultant force acting on an object, the more the oject accelerates why?

A

the force and the acceleration are directly proportional. (You can write this as F ∝ a)

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10
Q

What is the directly proportional symbol?

A

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11
Q

Accelleration is also inversely proportional to the mass of the object, why?

A

so an object with a larger mass will accelerate less than one with a smaller mass (for a fixed resultant force).

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12
Q

There’s an incredibly useful formla that describes ‘Newson’s Second Law’ what is it?

A

F = ma

F - Resultant force (N)
m - Mass (kg)
a - Acceleration (m/s²) - see diagram on page 211

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13
Q

A van of mass of 2080kg has an engine that provides a driving force of 5200 N.

At 70 mph the drag force acting on the van is 5148 N. Find its acceleration at 70 mph

A

1) work out the resultant force on the van (drawing a free body diagram may help).

2) Rearrange F = ma and stick in the values you know

Resultant force = 5200 - 5148 = 52 N

a = F ÷ m
= 52 ÷ 2080 = 0.025 m/s²

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14
Q

What can you use Newton’s Second Law for?

A

to get an idea of the forces involved in everyday transport. Large forces are needed to produce large accelerations.

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15
Q

Estimate the resultant force on a car as it accelerates from rest to a typical speed?

A

1) Estimate the acceleration of the car, using typical speeds from page 207. (the ~ means approximately)

2) Estimate the mass of the car

3) Put these numbers into Newton’s 2nd Law

A typical speed of a car is ~25 m/s. It takes ~10 s to reach this.

So a = Δv ÷ t = 25 ÷ 10 = 2.5 m/s²

Mass of a car is ~1000 kg.

So using F = ma 1000 x 2.5 = 2500 N

So the resultant force is ~2500 N

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16
Q

Find the force needed for an 80 kg man on a 10 kg bike to accelerate at 0.25 m/s² (2 marks)

A

F = ma = (80 + 10) x 0.25 (1 mark)
= 22.5 N (1 mark).