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newton's Laws of motion

Newtons 3 Laws

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Newton?s 3 Laws Of Motion Mia Bentley and Dekendrick Bullie 2nd period 10/9/15 Newton?s 1st law An object at rest will remain at rest unless effected by an unbalanced force. An object in motion stays in motion at the same speed unless effected by an unbalanced force. Also known as law of inertia There is a natural tendency for objects to do their own thang All objects resist changes in their states of motion and will maintain motion if not affected by an unbalanced force Any object in motion involves acceleration and then applies the second law Everyone continues in a state of rest or moving uniformly except being when its changed by an outside force Force is necessary for the change of velocity (no force, no acceleration) Newton?s 1st law .

College Physics Chapter 4 Notes

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Chapter 4 Notes: The Laws of Motion Forces Force ? push or pull on some object vector quantity Contact Forces ? result from physical contact between two objects Field Forces ? ?action-at-a-distance? gravity electric force magnetic force * The known fundamental forces in nature are all field forces In order of decreasing strength: strong nuclear force electromagnetic force weak nuclear force gravitational force Newton?s First Law An object moves with a velocity that is constant in magnitude and direction, unless acted on by a nonzero net force Net Force ? vector sum of all external forces exerted on an object Mass and Inertia Inertia ? tendency of an object to continue in its original state of motion Mass ? measure of an object?s resistance to changes in its motion due to force

stuff

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Paragraph 1- Materials and Procedure Materials: 1 Pop Bottle 1 Balloon 1 Straw Duct Tape Scissors 1 Rubber Band Step 1: We wrapped our pop bottle in zebra duct tape for easy floating in the water. Step 2: Made an opening in the cap for the straw to go through. Step 3: Cut our pop bottle open to make space for the balloon. Step 4: Put the straw through the cap and taped the balloon to the straw securely/tied a rubber band to it Step 5: Blew the balloon up and put our boat in water! Step 6: Now you have your very own boat! (: Our vehicle/boat moved forward by the air pushing out of the balloon, causing it to move forward in the water. (: Paragraph 2- Newton?s 3rd1st Law of Motion

physics notes

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Learner Guide for Cambridge O Level Physics ? Cambridge International Examinations 2012 Learner Guide for Cambridge O Level Physics How to use this guide The guide describes what you need to know about your O level Physics examination. It will help you to plan your revision programme for the written examinations and will explain what we are looking for in the answers you write. It can also be used to help you to revise by using the tick boxes in Section 4 ?What you need to know', to check what you know and which topic areas of Physics you have covered. The guide contains the following sections: Section 1: How will you be tested? This section will give you information about the theory and practical examination papers. Section 2: Examination tips

AP Physics B - Newton's Laws

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AP Newton's Laws Review Sheet Newton's First Law (AKA Newton's Law of Inertia) ?Consider an object with no force acting on it. If it is at rest, it will remain at rest; if it is moving, it will continue to move in a straight line at a constant speed? 5 Everyday Forces Weight Fg = mg (direction is always down) Normal Force Fn (direction is always perpendicular to the surface Friction Ff = ?Fn (direction always opposes direction of motion) Applied Force FA (pushing or pulling) Tension FT (direction is always along the string or rope; tensions are equal on either side of a massless, frictionless pulley)
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