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Notes Summer 2024 - Video Summary

The document discusses Isaac Newton's three laws of motion, explaining concepts such as inertia, net force, and equilibrium. It illustrates these principles with examples like a box on the ground, a reindeer pulling a sleigh, and an elevator system, emphasizing the importance of forces in determining motion. The document also highlights how to calculate forces using free body diagrams and the relationship between mass, acceleration, and net force.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
5 views4 pages

Notes Summer 2024 - Video Summary

The document discusses Isaac Newton's three laws of motion, explaining concepts such as inertia, net force, and equilibrium. It illustrates these principles with examples like a box on the ground, a reindeer pulling a sleigh, and an elevator system, emphasizing the importance of forces in determining motion. The document also highlights how to calculate forces using free body diagrams and the relationship between mass, acceleration, and net force.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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We’ve been talking a lot about the science of how things move -- you throw a ball in the air,

and
there are ways to predict exactly how it will fall. But there’s something we’ve been leaving out:
forces, and why they make things accelerate. And for that, we’re going to turn to a physicist
you’ve probably heard of: Isaac Newton. With his three laws, published in 1687 in his book
Principia, Newton outlined his understanding of motion -- and a lot of his ideas were totally new.
Today, more than 300 years later, if you’re trying to describe the effects of forces on

just about any everyday object -- a box on the ground, a reindeer pulling a sleigh, or an elevator
taking you up to your apartment -- then you’re going to want to use Newton’s Laws. And yes. I’ll
explain the reindeer thing in a minute. [Theme Music] Newton’s first law is all about inertia,
which is basically an object’s tendency to keep doing what it’s doing. It’s often stated as: “An
object in motion will remain in motion, and an object at rest will remain at rest, unless acted
upon by a force.”

Which is just another way of saying that, to change the way something moves -- to give it
ACCELERATION -- you need a net force. So, how do we measure inertia? Well, the most
important thing to know is mass. Say you have two balls that are the same size, but one is an
inflatable beach ball and the other is a bowling ball. The bowling ball is going to be harder to
move, and harder to stop once it’s moving. It has more inertia because it has more mass. Makes
sense, right? More mass means more STUFF, with a tendency to keep doing what it was

doing before your force came along, and interrupted it. And this idea connects nicely to
Newton’s second law: net force is equal to mass x acceleration. Or, as an equation, F(net) = ma.
It’s important to remember that we’re talking about NET force here -- the amount of force left
over, once you’ve added together all the forces that might cancel each other out. Let's say you
have a hockey puck sitting on a perfectly frictionless ice rink. And I know ice isn’t perfectly
frictionless but stick with it. If you’re pushing the puck along with

a stick, that’s a force on it - that isn’t being canceled out by anything else. So the puck is
experiencing acceleration. But when the puck is just sitting still, or even when it’s sliding across
the ice after you’ve pushed it, then all the forces are balanced out. That’s what’s known as
equilibrium. An object that’s in equilibrium can still be MOVING, like the sliding puck, but its
VELOCITY won’t be changing. It’s when the forces get UNbalanced, that you start to see the
exciting stuff happen.

And probably the most common case of a net force making something move is the gravitational
force. Say you throw a 5 kg ball straight up in the air -- and then, yknow, get out of the way,
because that could really hurt if it hits you... But the force of gravity is pulling down on the ball,
which is accelerating downward at a rate of 9.81 m/s^2. So the net force is equal to m a, but the
only force acting here is gravity. This means that, if we could measure the acceleration of the
ball, we’d be able to calculate the force of gravity.

And we CAN measure the acceleration -- it’s 9.81 m/s^2, the value we’ve been calling small g.
So the force of gravity on the ball must be 5 kg, which is the mass of the ball… times small g
which comes to 49.05 kilograms times meters per second squared! We use this equation for
gravity so much that it’s often just written as F(g) = mg. That’s how you determine the force of
gravity, otherwise known as weight. Now, those units can be a bit of a mouthful, so we just call
them Newtons. That’s right! We measure weight in Newtons, in honor of Sir Isaac, and NOT
kilograms!

Kilograms are a measure of mass! But gravity often isn’t the only force acting on the object. So
when we’re trying to calculate a NET force, we usually have to take into account more than just
gravity. This is where we get into one of the forces that tends to show up a lot, which is
explained by Newton’s third law. You probably know this law as “for every action, there’s an
equal but opposite reaction.” Which just means that if you exert a force on an object, it exerts an
equal force back on you.

And that’s what we call the normal force. “Normal” in this instance means “perpendicular”, and
the normal force is always perpendicular to whatever surface your object is resting on. At least,
it is when you're pushing on something big, and macroscopic, like a table. If you put a book
down on a table, the normal force is pushing -- and therefore pointing -- up. But if you put it on a
ramp, then the normal force is pointing perpendicular to the ramp. Now, the normal force isn’t
like most other forces. It’s special, because it changes its magnitude.

Say you have a piece of aluminum foil stretched tightly across the top of a bowl, and then you
put one lonely grape on top of it. Because of gravity, that grape is exerting a little bit of force on
the foil, and the normal force pushes right back, with the same amount. But then you add
another grape, which doubles the force on the foil -- in that case, the normal force doubles too.
That’ll keep happening until eventually you add enough grapes that they break through the foil.
That’s what happens when the normal force can’t match the force pushing against it.

But, what does Newton’s famous third law really mean, though? When I push on this desk with
my finger right now, I’m applying a force to it. And it’s applying an equal force right back on my
finger -- one that I can actually feel. But if that’s true -- and it is -- then why are we able to move
things? How can I pick up this mug? Or how can a reindeer pull a sleigh? Basically, things can
move because there’s more going on, than just the action and reaction forces. For example,
when a reindeer pulls on a sleigh, Newton’s third law tells us that the sleigh

is pulling back on it with equal force. But the reindeer can still move the sleigh forward, because
it’s standing on the ground. When it takes a step, it’s pushing backward on the ground with its
foot -- & the ground is pushing it forward. Meanwhile, the reindeer is also pulling on the sleigh,
while the sleigh is pulling right back. But the force from the GROUND PUSHING the reindeer
forward is STRONGER than the force from the sleigh pulling it back. So the animal accelerates
forward, and so does the sleigh.

So, one takeaway here is that: there would be no Christmas without physics! But, now that we
have an idea of some of the forces we might encounter, let’s describe what’s happening when a
box is sitting on the ground. The first thing to do -- which is the first thing you should ALWAYS
do when you’re solving a problem like this -- is draw what’s known as a free body diagram.
Basically, you draw a rough outline of the object, put a dot in the middle, and then draw and
label arrows, to represent all the forces.

We also have to decide which direction is positive -- in this case, we’ll choose up to be positive.
For our box, the free body diagram is pretty simple. There’s an arrow pointing down,
representing the force of gravity, and an arrow pointing up, representing the force of the ground
pushing back on the box. Since the box is staying still, we know that it’s not accelerating, which
tells us that those forces are equal, so the net force is equal to 0. But what if you attach a rope
to the top of the box, then connect it to the ceiling so

the box is suspended in the air? Your net force is still 0, because there’s no acceleration on the
box. And gravity is still pulling down in the same way it was before. But now, the counteracting
upward force comes from the rope acting on the box, in what we call the tension force. To make
our examples simpler, we almost always assume that ropes have no mass and are completely
unbreakable -- no matter how much you pull on them, they’ll pull right back. Which means that
the tension force isn’t fixed. If the box weighs 5 Newtons, then the

tension in the rope is also 5 Newtons. But if we add another 5 Newtons of weight, the tension in
the rope will become 10 Newtons. Kind of like how the normal force changes, with the grapes
on the foil. But in this case, it's in response to a pulling force instead of a push. The key is that
no matter what, you can add the forces together to give you a particular net force -- even though
that net force might NOT always be 0. Like, in an elevator. So let’s say you’re in an elevator -- or
as I call them, a lift.

The total mass of the lift, including you, is 1000 kg. And its movement is controlled by a
counterweight, attached to a pulley. The plan is to set up a counterweight of 850kg, and then let
the lift go. Once you let go, the lift is going to start accelerating downward - because it’s
HEAVIER than the counterweight. And the hope is that the counterweight will keep it from
accelerating TOO much. But how will we know if it’s safe? How quickly is the lift going to
accelerate downward? To find out, first let’s draw a free body diagram for the lift, making UP the
positive direction.

The force of gravity on the lift is pulling it down, and it’s equal to the mass of the lift x small g --
9810 Newtons of force, in the negative direction. And the force of tension is pulling the lift UP, in
the positive direction. Which means that for the lift, the net force is equal to the tension force,
minus the mass of the lift x small g. Now! Since Newton’s first law tells us that F(net) = ma, we
can set all of that to be equal to the lift’s mass, times some downward acceleration, -a. That’s
what we’re trying to solve for.

So, let’s do the same thing for the counterweight. Gravity is pulling it down with 8338.5 N of
force in the negative direction. And again, the force of tension is pulling it up, so that the net
force is equal to the tension force, minus the mass of the counterweight times small g. And
again, because of Newton’s second law, we know that all of that is equal to the mass of the
counterweight, times that same acceleration, “a” -- which is positive this time since the
counterweight is moving upward.

So! Putting that all together, we end up with two equations -- and two unknowns. We don’t have
a value for the tension force, and we don’t have a value for acceleration. But what we’re trying
to solve for is the acceleration. So we use algebra to do that. When you have a system of
equations like this, you can add or subtract all the terms on each side of the equals sign, to turn
them into one equation. For example, if you know that 1 + 2 = 3 and that 4 + 2 = 6, you can
subtract the first equation from the second to get 3 = 3.

And in our case, with the lift, subtracting the first equation from the second gets rid of the term
that represents the tension force. We now just have to solve for acceleration -- meaning, we
need to rearrange the equation to set everything equal to “a.” We end up with an equation that
really just says that “a” is equal to the difference between the weights -- or the net force on the
system -- divided by the total mass. Essentially, this is just a fancier version of F(net) = ma. And
we can solve that for “a”, which turns out to be 0.795 m/s^2.

Which is not that much acceleration at all! So, as long as you aren’t dropping too far down, you
should be fine. Even if the landing is a little bumpy. In this episode, you learned about Newton’s
three laws of motion: how inertia works, that net force is equal to mass x acceleration, how
physicists define equilibrium, and all about the “normal” force and the “tension” force. Crash
Course Physics is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios. You can head over to their
channel to check out amazing shows like: BrainCraft, It’s OK To Be Smart, and PBS Idea
Channel.

This episode of Crash Course was filmed in the Doctor Cheryl C. Kinney Crash Course Studio
with the help of these amazing people and our Graphics Team is Thought Cafe.

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