Force & Friction
Force & Friction
Objectives :
a) To explain Newton’s laws of motion
b) To illustrate laws of motion
c) To solve problems applying Newton’s
laws of motion
Examples of Forces
• A force is just a push or pull. Examples:
– an object’s weight
– tension in a rope
– friction
– attraction between an electron and proton
• Bodies don’t have to be in contact to
exert forces on each other, e.g., gravity.
Fundamental Forces of Nature
• Gravity
– Attraction between any two bodies w/ mass
– Weakest but most dominant
• Electromagnetic
– Forces between any two bodies w/ charge
– Attractive or repulsive
• Weak nuclear force – responsible for
radioactive decay
• Strong nuclear force – holds quarks
together (constituents of protons and
neutrons)
Some Types of Force
Review
I. Identify each of the following as a) contact force b) field force c) not a
force
1. Weight 2. mass 3. inertia 4. the push of the hand 5. air
resistance 6. acceleration
II. Problem solving:
a) Ann is holding a pillow with a mass of 0.3 kg when Sarah pull it from
Ann. If Sarah pulls it horizontally with a force of 10 N and Ann pulls
it horizontally with a force of 11 N. What is the horizontal
acceleration of the pillow?
b) You place a watermelon on a spring scale its mass is 4.0 kg, what is
the reading on the scale?
c) Maria is learning how to skate. She wants her mother to pull her with
the acceleration of 0.80 m/s2. if Maria has a mass of 27.2 kg with
what force does her mother need to pull her?
Newton’s Laws of Motion
1. Inertia: “An object in motion tends
to stay in motion. An object at rest
tends to stay at rest.”
2. Fnet = ma
3. Action – Reaction: “For every
action there is an equal but
opposite reaction.”
1 Law: Inertia
st
2 kg 10 N
Fnet = m a
1N = 1 kg m/s 2
vf2 – v02 = 2 a d
Problem solving
1) A 6.0 kg object undergoes an acceleration of 2.0 m/s2. a)
What is the resultant force acting on it? b) if this force is
applied to a 4 kg object what acceleration is produced?
2) A football player accelerates a football from rest to a
speed of 10m/s during the time in which of 0.2 s. if the
football has mass of 0.50kg, what is the average force
was applied?
3) A freight train has a mass of 1.5 x 107 kg. if a locomotive
car exert a force of 7.5 x 105 N, how long does it take to
increase the speed of the train from rest to 80 km/h?
4) An airboat with a mass of 3.5 x 102 kg has an engine that
produces a horizontal force of 7.70 x 102 N. Find the
acceleration of the boat.
Normal force
• When an object lies on a table or on the
ground, the table or ground must exert
an upward force on it, otherwise gravity
would accelerate it down.
• This force is called the normal force.
N
m In this particular case,
N = mg.
N For example, if a
flower pot is
setting on an
incline, N is not
vertical; it’s at a
right angle to the
incline. Also, in
mg
this case, mg > N.
Normal force directions
• Up
– You’re standing on level ground.
– You’re at the bottom of a circle while flying a loop-
the-loop in a plane.
• Sideways
– A ladder leans up against a wall.
– You’re against the wall on the “Round Up” ride
when the floor drops out.
• At an angle
– A race car takes a turn on a banked track.
• Down
– You’re in a roller coaster at the top of a loop.
Cases in which N mg
1. Mass on incline
2. Applied force acting on the mass
3. Nonzero acceleration, as in an elevator or
launching space shuttle
N FA N
N a
mg
mg mg
When does N = mg ?
frictionless floor
frictionless floor
T1 pulls on the 8-kg box to the right just as hard
as it pulls on the middle box to the left.
T1 must be < 38 N, or the 8-kg box couldn’t
accelerate.
T2 pulls on the middle box to the right just as
hard as it pulls on the 6-kg box to the left.
T1 must be > T2 or the middle box couldn’t
accelerate.
Free Body Diagram – system
For convenience, we’ll choose
N left to be the positive direction.
T2 = 6a = 6(2) = 12 N.
(Remember, a = 2 m/s2 for all mg
three boxes.)
38 N T1 T2
8 kg 5 kg 6 kg
frictionless floor
Free Body Diagram – middle box
N and mg cancel N
out again.
T1 T2 = 12 N
5 kg
Fnet = m a implies:
T1 – T2 = 5a. So, mg
T1 – 12 = 5(2), and
T1 = 22 N
38 N T1 T2
8 kg 5 kg 6 kg
frictionless floor
Free Body Diagram – left box
Let’s check our work
N
using the left box.
38 N T1 = 22 N N and mg cancel out
8 kg
here too.
Fnet = ma implies:
mg
38 - 22 = ma = 8(2).
16 = 16.
38 N T1 T2
8 kg 5 kg 6 kg
Problem solving
1. What is the normal force when the mass
of an object is 2.75 kg?
2. Calculate the mass of a body with a
normal force of 15 N.
3. What is the normal force of a stone with a
mass of 0.74kg?
Friction
Friction is the force bodies can impart on each
other when they’re in contact.
The friction forces are parallel to the contact
surface and occur when…
•One body slides over the other, or…
•They cling together despite an external force.
The forces shown are an action-reaction pair.
(force on box
due to table)
f box
v
fs, max = s N
maximum
force of static
fs, max is the force you
friction must exceed in order to
budge a resting object.
Static friction force varies
• fs, max is a constant in a given problem, but fs
varies.
• fs matches FA until FA exceeds fs, max.
• Example: In the picture below, if s for a
wooden crate on a tile floor is 0.6,
fs, max = 0.6 (10 ) (9.8) = 58.8 N.
fs = 27 N FA = 27 N
10 kg
fs = 43 N FA = 43 N
10 kg
Canned
food 14.7 kg
Example 2
Same as the last problem except with a bigger FA: You push
the canned food with a constant force of 281 N.
k = 0.35 and s =0.58, same as before. When will the canned
food have moved 15 m?
N
fk FA
mg
step 5: Fnet = FA – fk = 281 - 50.421 = 230.579 N
Note: do not round off until the end of the problem.
vf 2 - v02 = 2 a d
0 - v 2 = -2 g d
d = v 2 / (2 g)
Unit check: (m/s)2 / (m/s2) = m2 / m = m