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Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s centripetal acceleration. Hint: a c = rω 2

Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

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Page 1: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Flashback

An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s centripetal acceleration.

Hint: ac = rω2

Page 2: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Announcements

Units & Symbols Quiz on Wednesday Circular Motion Quiz on Thursday My contact information:

• Email: [email protected]

• Cell: 859 466 6402

Page 3: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Centripetal Force & Newton’s Universal Law

of Gravitation

Circular MotionPhysics

Mr. McCallister

Page 4: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Recall:

ac = vt2/r

ac = rω2

Newton’s Second Law: F = ma

Page 5: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Centripetal Force

Centripetal Force is the force responsible for circular motion• Symbol: Fc • Unit: N

Recall: F = ma Fc = mvt

2/r Fc = mrω2

Page 6: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Centripetal Force

Centripetal force is not a new kind of force.

It is the name given to any kind of force responsible for keeping an object in circular motion.• Ex: Car turning = friction is Fc

David’s sling = tension is Fc

Page 7: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Practice 7H p 261 #2-4 #1

• A girl sits in a tire that is attached to an overhanging tree limb by a rope 2.10 m in length. The girl’s father pushes her to a tangential speed of 2.50 m/s. If the magnitude of the force that maintains her circular motion is 88.0 N, what is the girl’s mass?

• Formula: Fc = mvt2/r

• Substitute: 88 = m(2.50)2 / 2.10• Solve: m = 29.6 kg

Page 8: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Fundamental forces

All forces, at their most basic fundamental level, are field forces!• Ex: Atoms in hand repelling atoms in

wall All mass in the universe attracts all

other mass in the universe with a gravitational force. The size of the force depends on:• the amount of mass the objects have• how far apart the objects are.

Page 9: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Gravitational Force

Gravitational force: an attractive force between all mass in the universe. The size of the force depends on:• the amount of mass the objects have• how far apart the objects are.

Symbol: Fg

Unit: N

Page 10: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Newton’s Universal Law of Gravitation

Fg = G m1 m2 / r2

• Where m1 & m2 are masses in kg r is the distance the masses are separated in

m. r is measured from the center of mass of large objects (ex: planet’s core)

G is the constant of universal gravitation• 6.673 x 10-11 N m2 / kg2

Page 11: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Stop to Think…

Compare the gravitational force on the moon from the earth to the gravitational force on the earth from the moon.

They are equal! (Newton’s Third Law)

Page 12: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Calculating g.

Let m1 = person’s mass, m2 = Earth’s mass

Recall weight = mass x g, where g = 9.81 m/s2

So Fg = mg and Fg = G m1 m2 / r2

• mg = G m mE / rE2

The person’s mass cancels…

• g = G mE / rE2

Page 13: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Calculating g.

g = G mE / rE2

• mE = 5.98 x 1024 kg

• rE = 6.37 x 106 m• G = 6.673 x 10-11 N m2/kg2

Substitute and Solve:• g = 6.673 x 10-11 x 5.98 x 1024

(6.37 x 106)2

• g = 9.83 m/s2

Page 14: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Practice 7I pg 265 #2-4

#1• If the mass of each ball in Sample

Problem 7I is 0.800 kg, at what distance between the balls will the gravitational force between the balls have the same magnitude as that in Sample Problem 7I? How does the change in mass affect the magnitude of the gravitational force?

Page 15: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Practice 7I pg 265 #2-4

#1• Formula:

Fg = G m1 m2 / r2

• Substitution: 8.92 x 10-11 = 6.673 x 10-11 x (.8 x .8)/r2

• Solve: r = 0.692 m

Page 16: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Defying Gravity

Imagine a cannon on a tall mountain:

vesc, Earth = 11,200 m/s

Page 17: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Black Holes

In 1916, Karl Schwarzschild predicted an object so massive and dense that something travelling at even the speed of light near the dense object could not escape its gravity.

Page 18: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Black Holes

The radius at which light cannot escape the object’s gravity is called the Schwarzschild radius.

The physical space at the Schwarzschild radius is called the event horizon.

The physical space inside the event horizon is called a black hole.

Page 19: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s
Page 20: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Gravitational Lensing

Massive objects can bend light, just like a lens.

Page 21: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s
Page 23: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s
Page 24: Flashback An object experiencing circular motion has an angular speed of 10 rad/s and is traveling 5 m away from its axis of rotation. Find the object’s

Homework due Tomorrow:

By end of class tomorrow:• p. 261 7H #2-4• p. 265 7I #2-3• p. 265 Section Review #1-5