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Title: Newtonian Mechanics


1
Newtonian Mechanics
2
  • Corpus omne persevare in status suo quiescendi
    vel movendi uniformiter in directum nisi
    quantenus illud a viribus impressis cogitur
    statum suum mutare.

3
Newtons First Law
  • Every body continues in its state of rest or
    uniform motion in a straight line unless
    compelled by an external force to change that
    state.

4
Galileo and the Law of Inertia
  • Galileo looked at motion differently.
  • If you push an object across a surface, the
    smoothness or lubrication on the surface affects
    how hard you have to push the object to keep the
    object moving.
  • As the surface gets slicker and slicker, the
    force required gets smaller. Eventually, the
    force required to keep the object moving would
    decrease to zero. This leads to

5
The Law of Inertia
  • The Law of Inertia states that a body once set in
    motion and thereafter undisturbed will continue
    in uniform motion forever, all by itself.
  • This can be simplified to, An object continues
    doing what it is already doing.

6
Newton add to the Law of Inertia
  • Newton used Galileos Law of Inertia as the basis
    for his first law that was published in his 1687
    work, Principia Mathematical Principles of
    Natural Philosphy.
  • Newton extended this law with other laws of
    motion.

7
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8
Newtons Life
  • Born December 25, 1642
  • Gregorian calendar January 4, 1643 but it was
    not adopted until 1752.
  • Started Trinity College June 1661 and wanted to
    be a lawyer.
  • The plague closed Cambridge for two years
    starting in 1665. Newton did work at home.
  • Appointed to the Lucasian Chair in 1669.

9
More on Newton
  • 1687 published Philosophiae Naturalis Principia
    Mathematica
  • 1693 had a nervous breakdown
  • 1696 appointed Warden of the Royal Mint
  • 1699 appointed Master of the Royal Mint
  • 1703 elected president of the Royal Society
  • 1708 Knighted
  • 1727 died

10
Inertia and Mass
  • So strong is our belief in the Law of Inertia, we
    try to use inertia reference frames.
  • Inertial reference frames are frames of
    reference where the Law of Inertia does work.
  • The rotating frame of reference is an example of
    a not inertial reference frame. Our minds start
    to create forces to explain apparent deviations
    from the expected motions.

11
A Word About Forces
  • Forces are defined as a push or pull on an
    object.
  • Forces are vector quantities.
  • In the Metric System of measurement, forces are
    measured in Newtons (N).
  • 1 N 1 kgm/s²

12
The Fundamental Forces
  • There are four fundamental forces in Nature. All
    other forces are really combinations of the four
    fundamental forces.
  • The four fundamental forces are
  • Gravity
  • Electric-Magnetic Force
  • Strong Nuclear Force
  • Weak Nuclear Force

13
Force of Gravity
  • The force of attraction between any two masses.
  • This force is proportional to the product of the
    masses and is inversely proportional to the
    square of the distance between the masses.

14
Electric Force
  • The electric and the magnetic force are two
    different aspects of the same force.
  • The electric force can be an attractive or a
    repulsive force and depends on the charges
    involved and the distance between the charges.

15
Strong Nuclear Force
  • The strong nuclear force is the attractive force
    between two nucleons (neutrons or protons).
  • The strong nuclear force is responsible for
    holding the nucleus of an atom together.

16
Weak Nuclear Force
  • The weak nuclear force is a repulsive force that
    is responsible for radioactivity.

17
Common Forces
  • Normal Force
  • The force a surface exerts on an object.
  • The normal force is perpendicular to the
    surface.
  • Tension
  • The force that is exerted by a rope, string,
    cable etc. on an object.
  • Remember, you cant push with a rope.
  • Elastic Force
  • The force exerted by stretching or compressing
    an elastic object.

18
More Common Forces
  • Friction
  • The force between two surfaces acting parallel
    to the surface.
  • Buoyancy
  • The force a fluid applies to an object due to
    differences in density.

19
Units of Force
  • In the SI system, forces are measured in Newtons
    (N).
  • A Newton is equivalent to a kilogrammetre/second
    ².
  • 1 N 1 kgm/s²

20
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