Module 1 (G9) - Forces and Motions
Module 1 (G9) - Forces and Motions
MOTIONS
Uniformly Accelerated Motion:
(Horizontal and vertical dimension)
Projectile Motion
Impulse and Momentum
Conservation of Linear Momentum
Collisions: (Elastic and Inelastic)
Sample problem:
Formula:
dx = vt or v = d/t (velocity equals displacement
over time)
Uniformly Accelerated Motion:
Horizontal Dimension
Acceleration
a
Final Velocity
=
Displacement
Sample problem no. 1
A Nissan Sentra is stopped at a traffic
light. When the light turns green, the driver
accelerates so that the car’s speedometer
reads 10 m/s after5 s. What is the car’s
acceleration assuming it is constant?
It gives us vf = 12 m/s , dx = 36 m
Sample problem no. 3
A car has uniformly accelerated from rest to a
speed of 25 m/s after travelling 75 m. What is its
acceleration?
2a(75m) = (25m/s)2 – 0
a = 4.2 m/s2
Uniformly Accelerated Motion:
Vertical Dimension
Free Fall
Time Symmetry
– time required to reach maximum height is
equal to the time for it to return from its starting
point.
Speed Symmetry
– the speed of an object during upward trip is
equal to the speed during the downward trip.
Formula for free fall:
g
Sample problem no. 4
The villain man fell off a cliff that is 105 m tall
after Jackie Chan kicked him.
(a) How long will the villain take to hit the ground?
(b) What is the man’s final velocity?
Projectile motion
- is any object that once projected or dropped
continues in motion by its own inertia and is influenced
only by the downward force of gravity.
Projectile motion has 2 components:
horizontal and vertical component. The
horizontal component of motion is uniform
motion. The vertical component of motion is
free fall. This means that if air resistance is
neglected, a projectile moves horizontally at
constant speed as it falls vertically with
acceleration equal to “g”.
The path that a projectile follows is called its
trajectory. The trajectory of a projectile is a
parabola.
Horizontal and Vertical Component
of Projectile Motion
Horizontal Vertical
Acceleration ax = 0 ay = g
Displacement dx = vxt
Sample problem:
A golf ball is shoot at 76 m/s at 30° above the
horizon. What is the vertical velocity (a) 1.5
seconds later (b) 4.5 seconds later?
When it reached its
maximum height of the
projectile(velocity
becomes zero), the
gravity will take over
and accelerates the
object downward.
Time of flight – is the time from when the object
is projected to the time it reaches the surface.
Time depends on the initial velocity magnitude
and the angle of the projectile.
Formula: p = mv
The two balls have the same momenta
of 2 kg m/s.
Sample problem:
A system is made up of three bodies with their
respective velocities: body A of mass 1.5 kg and
moving east at 2.0 m/s; body B of mass 2.0 kg
moving west at 3.0 m/s; body C of mass 5.2 kg
moving west at 2.5 m/s. What is the momentum of
the system?
Example 1:
When you step from a small boat on to a dock.
As you steps toward the dock, the boat moves
away from the dock which you might fall into the
water.
Example 2:
When a gun is fired, the bullet moves in the
forward direction but the riffle recoils in the
opposite direction.
Formula:
m1v1+ m2v2 = 0
Collision
- is an interaction between two or more
bodies that usually come in contact with
each other.
In general, when two or more bodies collide,
linear momentum is always conserved. The total
kinetic energy may or may not be conserved
depending on the type of collision.
Perfectly Inelastic:
- bodies stick together, KE is not conserved.
Inelastic:
- bodies separates, KE is not conserved.
Elastic:
- bodies separates, KE is conserved.
END of
MODULE 1