Dynamics 🔨

A causual model for motion

Mr. Porter - AP Physics 2024

📖 Contents:

Try It...

Mr. Porter and his wife walk from Nighthawks to Troy Savings Bank Music Hall. They walk 6 blocks East and then 2 Blocks South. [1 Block = 100 Meters]

  1. Determine the distance that they traveled.
  2. Determine their displacement.

Vctor Quantities:

A vector is a quantity with both magnitude (size) and direction.

Examples:

  • The child was displaced 9 meters North.
  • The car has a velocity of 10 meters per second East
  • , , , , , etc

Scalar Quantities

A scalar is a quantity with just magnitude.

Examples

  • The child traveled a distance of 12 meters
  • The car is moving 20 miles per hour
  • The frog has mass of 0.5 kg.
  • , , , etc

Representing Vectors

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Representing Vector Components

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Vector Components

  • Parts of a two-dimensional vector
  • The component of a vector is the influence of that vector in a given direction.
    • i.e. How far East of a North East displacement did you walk?
  • We look at the perpendicular components
    • How much of the vector is in the x-direction
    • How much of the vector is in the y-direction
  • Vector is made up of components and

Vector Components Math

  • Notice this is a right triangle
    • Depending on the angle...

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What are the components of Vector ?

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What are the components of Vector and ?

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Use Trig to Find and

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Adding Vectors

Vectors are added "tip to tail", that is redraw the vectors so that the tip of one vector is attached to the tail of the second vector.

The resultant vector S is equal to the addition of vectors a and b


Adding Vectors

Mr. Porter's brother is on a hike. He walks:

  • 2 KM North
  • 3 KM East
  • 5 KM Exactly South East

Draw a the vector addition diagram to represent this motion

Adding Vectors

Using Components

You can sum the components of the two vectors to find the components of the resultant vector

Practice and Review

In Pivot Interactives, using the PHET Simulation

Which objects move with constant speed?

What do you notice about the conditions where the objects move at a constant speed?

Mallet Ball

🔨 🎳 🔨 🎳

Mallet Ball

We are going to try and recreate uniform motion (constant acceleration) where and with objects moving over smooth, hard, level surfaces.

  • First with a bowling ball,
  • then by looking at a simulation

Bowling Ball Situations - Using a mallet and a bowling ball:

Each time we use the mallet, let it bounce. (Don’t use the mallet like a bulldozer.)

  • Start with a stationary bowling ball. Then, speed up the bowling ball from rest.
  • Have someone roll a bowling ball. Then, bring it to a stop.
  • Have someone roll a bowling ball. Then, keep it moving at a CV.
  • Have someone roll a bowling ball. With one tap, have the bowling ball make a 90 degree turn.
  • Keep a bowling ball moving in a circle at constant speed.

Your goal: summarize the relation between taps and motion in as few statments as possible


Lab Safety:

  1. No High Mallets
  2. Be aware of your surroundings
  3. No excessive rolls
  4. No smashing into walls, mats, classmates, etc.

Lab Instructions:

  1. Everyone in your group should play mallet ball at least once.
  2. As a group think about how you will accomplish the mallet ball task.
  3. Attempt to accomplish task.
  4. Record how you successfully accomplished the task
    • Written description
    • Drawing that models the motion and your mallet taps
  5. Finally, write a general descriptive model that explains how mallet taps relate to the motion of the bowling ball

How do taps relate to

the motion of

the bowling ball?


Does our rule relating motion and taps work for the bowling ball tapping the mallet? Or in other words does the bowling ball tap the mallet?

What would happen as we make the taps more "constant"?

Describe the "taps" that affect the motion of the fan cart

Phet Tug of War

CER

On the next slide there is a list of statements. Decide if they the statement is true or false and then support that claim with evidence from the simulation and reasoning based on our models of motion and forces.

Phet Tug of War:

  1. A person's location on the rope matters.
  2. Different combinations of people can produce the same sum of forces.
  3. The sum of the forces on the cart is always equal to the addition of the individual forces.
  4. It is impossible for the cart to accelerate to the left if there are people pulling it to the right.
  5. The side with the bigger person will always win.
  6. The side with more people will always win.
  7. It is impossible to make the cart decrease in speed.
  8. It is impossible to make the cart move at a steady speed.
  9. The cart will always move in the direction of the sum of the forces.
  10. If the sum of the forces is zero, the cart must be at rest.

✏️ Write a Summary

How do forces affect the motion of an object?

You can do this in 2 sentences

Newton's First Law

When the forces acting on a system are unbalanced the system will accelerate.

When forces acting on a system are balanced the system will maintain its constant velocity.

A force is

an interaction between two objects.

Forcse can be a result of contact or due to forces at a distance

Newton's Third Law

A force is an interaction between two objects. The two objects mutually apply this force on each other. The force is always equal in magntiude and opposite in direction.

Force Pairs

  • Newton's Third Law describes force pairs
    • You can identify these pairs with an interaction diagram
    • The line that connects each bubble or object is the force pair.

Contact Interactions

  1. Compression: when two objects' surfaces are pushed together and the surfaces deform
  2. Stretch: when two objects pull on each other and are elongated
  3. Shear: When surfaces pull on each other as they slide or attempt to slide

Force Names

Make a Table

Force Name Symbol Type Description Equation
Gravitational Force Long Range ... ...
9 total Forces

Gravitational Force or

Type: Long Range force

Description

Attractive force between all objects with mass.

Equation

TBD

Normal Force or

Type: Contact, compression

Description

"Perpendicular Force" occurs because atoms are compressed and want to return to their original position. Always perpendicular to the surfaces in contact

Equation

None

Spring Force

Type: Contact, stretch or compression

Description

Spring is stretched or compressed and wants to return to "natural" length

Equation

TBD

Tension Force or

Type: Contact, stretch

Description

Atomic Structure is stretched and wants to return to natural length

Equation

None

Friction Force or

Type: Contact, shear

Description

Irregular surfaces interlock to slow or prevent sliding of two surfaces relative to eachother Always parallel to the surfaces in contact

Equation

None

Drag Force

Type: Contact

Description

Fluid/gas Friction, resists objects motion through a fluid/gas

Equation

None

Bouyant Force

Type: Contact

Description

Fluid/Gas Normal Force

Equation

None

Electrostatic Force

Type: Long Rance

Description

Attractice or resistive force because objects have charge

Equation

None

Magnetic Force

Type: Long Range

Description

Attractive or repulsive force because of moving charge

Equation

None

Force Diagrams

💭 ↙️ ➡️ ⬇️ ⬆️ 🗯️

Free Body Diagrams

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Vector Addition Diagrams

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Unbalanced Force Lab

What variables affect the acceleration of the fan cart?

Unbalanced Forces

Design an experiment(s) to find a mathematical relationship between those variables and acceleration

Consider:

  • What will you measure?
  • How will you measure it?
  • What tools can you use to limit uncertainty?
  • How can you design your experiment to limit uncertainty?

Before you begin...

🤔 How will you measure the fan force for each settings?

Unbalanced Force Lab

Create a mathematical model relating mass, force, and acceleration.

Essential Questions:

  1. How is mass related to the acceleration for a constant net force?
  2. How is net force related to the acceleration for a constant mass?

Notes:

  • Be sure to take at least 8 data points
  • Design two experiments to answer the above questions
  • Linearize data in analysis

🎯 Board Meeting Goal: Develop a mathematical model relating net force, mass, and acceleration

Structure:

  1. How did you run your experiment?
  2. What are your results for each experiment?
    • What is your slope/intercept? What does it represent? How does it compare to controls?

Questions to ask peers

  • How do you know that?
  • What is your evidence for...
  • Why do you think...
  • How does your data support...
  • Thats interesting our data shows the opposite...

Gravity

Notes:

  • Weight == == Force of Gravity...so
  • Weight is a FORCE, mass is scalar quantity
  • is the gravitational field strength
    • Measured in N/kg
    • changes based on planet and location on that planet
    • near the surface of the Earth

Solving Force Problems

Quantitatively 🧮

Try it - Mild 🫑

Two giant holiday ornaments are hanging on Mr. Porter's front porch as show in the diagram to the right.

  1. Draw the FBD for each ornament.
  2. Determine the value of all of the forces.

Medium 🌶️

In another episode of Don't Do This At Home, Jason secures a strong cable to two dead trees in the woods behind his home and attempts to jump-start his tight-rope walking career. His first attempt ends in the rather precarious position shown in the diagram. The rope makes an angle of 10° with the horizontal. Jason has a mass of 70 kg. Determine the tension in the cable.

Spicy 🌶️🌶️🌶️

Tarzan, much to his dismay, gets his loincloth stuck on a branch. He’s left hanging with the vine pulling upward at a angle and his loincloth pulling him horizontally to the right.

  1. Draw FBD for Tarzan
  2. Write the equation for the vertical forces on Tarzan () and horizontal forces ()
  3. Tarzan is 75 kg what is his weight?
  4. Determine the tension in the vine and his loincloth.

Lab

Notes:

  • is proportional to stretch or compression ()
  • The proportionality constant, , is called "the spring constant" (creative)

  • A spring is Hookean if it follows the equation above

AP Practice

🤔 🏋️ 📖 ✍️ 🔨



Fan Cart Lab

Draw a FBD and vector addition diagram for the fan cart for the following three situations:

  1. Fan off, cart at rest
  2. Fan on, held in place by Mr. Porter
  3. Fan on, moving on level track

Newton's Second Law


Applying Newton's Second Law

  1. Draw Free Body Diagram
  2. Split Forces into x & y components
  3. Sum forces in x & y direction ( and )
  4. Solve

Elevator Problems

Solve on whiteboard with your group first & then make notes for your future forgetful self in your notebook.


Elevator Scale Reading

A person who weighs 500 N is standing on a scale in an elevator. The elevator is identical in all cases. The velocity and acceleration of the elevators at the instant shown are given.

  1. List the cases where the scale reading is greater than 500 N.
  2. List the cases where the scale reading is less than 500 N.
    List the cases where the scale reading is equal to than 500 N.

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Assuming Friction...

Rank the boxes from easiest to acceleration to most difficult to accelerate. Explain your reasoning...

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Boxes are held at rest against rough, vertical walls by forces pushing horizontally on the boxes as shown.

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Rank the magnitude of the normal force exerted on the walls by the boxes.

Boxes are held at rest against rough, vertical walls by forces pushing horizontally on the boxes as shown.

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Rank the magnitude of the normal force on each box from greatest to least.

Ignoring the normal force...which box(es) do you think is the most difficult to hold up? Why?

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In both cases below, Grace pulls the same large crate across a floor at a constant speed of .

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Is the magnitude of the force exerted by Grace on the rope (i) greater in Case A, (ii) greater in Case B, or (iii) the same in both cases?
Explain your reasoning.





Friction

Notes:

  • is only for static friction
    • Why? Only need friction to balance so you don't need the maximum amount of static friction
  • (greek letter mu, pronouced "mew") - coefficient of friction
    • how likely surface pairs are to interlock
    • always less than 1






Static Friction Lab Example


Common Values

** From NYS Regents Physics Reference Tables

How do Kinetic compare to Static values?


Friction Lab

Objective

Determine the coefficient of static friction between your block and a two flat surfaces in the classroom.

Materials

  • Wooden block
  • Electronic Force Sensor

Hypothesis

Which surface will have a greater coefficient of friction?


Friction Practice

Consider the free-body diagram for an object accelerating across a surface. The object has a mass of 2.12-kg. There is a forward thrust force of 50.0 N. The coefficient of friction between the object and the surface is 0.365. Determine the …

  1. experienced by the object
  2. experiened by the object
  3. experienced by the object
  4. Acceleration experienced by the object

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Dexter Eius is running through the cafeteria when he slips on some mashed potatoes and falls to the floor. (Let that be a lesson for Dexter.) Dexter lands in a puddle of milk and skids to a stop with an acceleration of . Dexter weighs .

Determine the coefficient of friction between Dexter and the milky floor.


Amaya is driving his car home after soccer practice. He is traveling down Lake Avenue with a speed of . A deer runs onto the road and Amaya skids to a stop in .

Determine the coefficient of friction between the car tires and the roadway.


Consider the free-body diagram shown at the right. If the applied force is 97.7 N at an angle of 27.4 degrees, the force of gravity is 110 N and the coefficient of friction is 0.369, then what is the acceleration (in m/s/s) of the object?


Inclined Planes

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Inclined Planes

Component of gravity perpendicular to incline

Component of gravity parallel to incline

**if you can't find these with ease using trig, you MUST memorize those equations


Lab partners Anna Litical and Noah Formula placed a 0.25-kg glider on their air track and inclined the track at 10.4° above the horizontal. Use the structure provided at the right to determine the …

  1. Force of gravity
  2. Parallel component of gravity
  3. Perpendicular component of gravity
  4. Normal Force
  5. Net Force
  6. Acceleration

The image shows our Einstein action figure sitting on a slab of wood coated with plastic tape. The angle at which Einstein slip's is . Determine the maximum coefficient of static friction, for Einstein in terms of , , and physical constants.

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Accelerating Systems

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Three blocks are connected by strings and pulled to the right by a force with magnitude , as shown in the figure above. All frictional forces are negligible. The tension in the right and left strings have magnitudes and , respectively. Taking the positive direction to be toward the right, which of the following is a correct equation of motion for the block of mass?

If the acceleration is derive an expression for , , and in terms of , , , and any universal constants.


Acceleration Systems

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Boxes are pulled by ropes along frictionless surfaces, accelerating toward the left. All of the boxes are identical, and the accelerations of all three systems are the same.

Rank the tensions in the ropes. Explain your reasoning


Accelerating Systems

In both cases a spaceship is pulling two cargo pods, one empty and one full. At the instant shown, the speed of the pods and spaceships is 300 m/s, but they have different accelerations as shown. All masses are given in terms of M, the mass of an empty pod.

Will the tension at point S in the tow rod be (i) greater in Case A, (ii) greater in Case B, or (iii) the same in both cases? Find the tension in each rope to help.


With your table

AP Workbook 2.K


In each case shown below, a box is sliding along a horizontal surface. There is friction between the box and the horizontal surface. The box is tied to a hanging stone by a massless rope running over a massless, frictionless pulley. All these cases are identical except for the different initial velocities of the boxes.

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Rank the magnitudes of the accelerations of the boxes at the instant shown. Explain your ranking


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