Newtons Law of Motion For Grade 8
Newtons Law of Motion For Grade 8
Newtons Law of Motion For Grade 8
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INVESTIGATING INERTIA
Coin Drop
Q9. What happens when you slowly
pulled the cardboard? Explain.
Q10. What happens when you
flicked the cardboard? Explain.
Stack of Coins
Q11. What happens when you hit the
coin at the bottom? Why is this
1st Law
Inertia is the
tendency of an
object to resist
changes in its
velocity:
whether in
motion or
motionless. These pumpkins will not move unless acted on
by an unbalanced force.
1st Law
Once airborne,
unless acted
on by an
unbalanced
force (gravity
and air – fluid
friction), it
would never
stop!
1st Law
Unless acted
upon by an
unbalanced
force, this golf
ball would sit
on the tee
forever.
Why then, do we observe
every day objects in motion
slowing down and becoming
motionless seemingly without
an outside force?
It’s a force we sometimes cannot see –
friction.
Objects on earth, unlike the
frictionless space the moon
travels through, are under the
influence of friction.
What is this unbalanced force that acts on an object in motion?
66 kg-m/sec/sec or 66 N
On a freely
1s 394.8.8mm/s/s
falling body,
9.8m/s is added
to the velocity of
the ball in each 2s 1494.66m/s
second
3s 2594.4m/s
Try to whirl an object tied to a string
horizontally above your head. Then observe
what happens if you release the object. How
does it travel after release?
3rd Law
Flying gracefully
through the air, birds
depend on Newton’s
third law of motion. As
the birds push down on
the air with their wings,
the air pushes their
wings up and gives
them lift.
Consider the flying motion of birds. A bird flies
by use of its wings. The wings of a bird push air
downwards. In turn, the air reacts by pushing
the bird upwards.
The size of the force on the air equals the size
of the force on the bird; the direction of the force
on the air (downwards) is opposite the direction
of the force on the bird (upwards).
Action-reaction force pairs make it possible for
birds to fly.
Other examples of Newton’s Third Law