NEWTONS THIRD LAW: Every action has an equal and opposite
reaction
Just a few posts ago, I explained Newton’s Third Law in
relation to Harry Potter and the platform nine and three quarters. Thinking
back to that, we know that according to the law, every action has an equal and opposite
reaction, and that Harry’s cart and the platform hit with the same force. An action
reaction pair is a term used to describe the relationship between two interacting
objects. In this case, the reaction pair is “cart hits wall, wall hits cart”
Don’t forget that the cart will experience a greater
acceleration than the wall. This is because mass and acceleration are inversely
proportional (Newton’s Second Law), so the object with a larger mass (wall)
will have a smaller acceleration, and the other way around.
If you have ever played a game of tug of war, you may wonder
what makes one team win over the other. According to the law, we know that each team is pulling the other with an equal force. However, the team
that wins is the team that exerts a greater force on the GROUND. Refer to the
diagram below for details…
Team red and team blue pull eachother with equal and
opposite forces. However, the blue team pushes the ground with more force than
the red team, which causes them to pull left with more force, and win.
VECTORS: A visual tool used to add up opposing forces
Say you have a weight hanging from a string, if the weight
is on one side of the string, which side has more tension?
The longer the tension vectors (red) the more tension that
piece of the string has. So there is more tension near the weight, and less on
the other side. This means that the longer side of the string with more tension
(left) is more suseptable to breakage.
GRAVITATIONAL FORCE: Everything with mass attracts all other
objects with mass
Depends on…
àthe mass of the objects
àdistance
between the two objects. The more distance, the less force
Here is how you would use the equation
Force is directly proportional to mass
Force is inverse squared to distance
Double distanceà
force is a ¼ of the original
Triple distanceà
force is a 1/9 of the original
Cut d by ½à
force is 4x’s greater
Cut d by 1/3à force is 9x’s greater
TIDES: As stated in my previous blog post, tides are created
by the differences in force on opposite sides of the earth. Once side of the earth has a greater force,
since it is closest to the moon, and the other side which is farther from the
moon experiences less force. These unbalanced forces created a “bulge” or “potato”
around the earth (red)
Spring tides are high tides that are higher than usual, and occur
when the sun, moon, and earth are all in one line. Similarly, neap tides are
lower than typical low tides, which occur when the earth and moon create a
right angle.
CONSERVATION OF MOMENTUM
p=mv
∆p=pfinal-pinitial
the
total momentum of a system remains constant before and after a collision
àmomentum can be neither
created nor destroyed
P
Total Before= P Total After
Before
After
MaVa+MbVb=Ma+b(Vab)
MOMENTUM
AND IMPULSE RELATIONSHIP
Impulse:
the force exerted on something by a specific time interval
j=∆p
j=fx∆t
Have
you ever wondered exactly how seatbelts keep us safe? This can be answered with
knowledge of momentum and impulse…
Since
change in momentum equals impulse, we know that the car will stop moving regardless of how it stops.
àthe ∆p and j are
constant
with
airbag J=F∆t
without airbag J=
F ∆t
As
you can see above, force and change in time are inversely proportional. The
seatbelt increases the time of the impulse, and therefore decreases the force.
Less force, means it is less likely for you to be injured.
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