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Laws of Motion Submitted by: Myanne Dobi P. Ontejo Johann Dmitri Nagtalon Paul Jaffas Roa

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Laws of Motion

Submitted by: Myanne Dobi P. Ontejo Johann Dmitri Nagtalon Paul Jaffas Roa

Let’s Start!

Newton's laws of motion are three physical laws that together laid the foundation for classical mechanics. They describe the relationship between a body and the forces acting upon it, and its motion in response to said forces.

He had three laws: 1. Law of Inertia 2. Law of Acceleration 3. Law of Interaction

Newton’s Laws of Motion

Newton’s 1st Law of motion states that an object at rest stays at rest unless an outside force causes it to move, or an object in motion stays in motion unless a force is applied to stop it or change it’s direction.

If an object isn't moving at first, it won't move unless you force it to move. If an object is moving (at a constant speed), it won't stop unless you force it to slow down.

Law of Inertia

This ball will roll if someone will apply force to it. And this ball will continue rolling unless someone will take hold of it or stop it.

Newton’s 2nd Law states that the acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the force applied but inversely proportional to the mass of the object

The acceleration of an object depends on the strength of the net force applied to it as well as on the mass of the object. The stronger the force, the greater the acceleration of the object. The greater the mass, the greater the mass will resist the force, and the smaller the acceleration.

Law of Acceleration

If you apply the same force to move the two (truck, motorcycle), of course the motorcycle would run faster because it has a lesser mass than the truck which means it can be easily controlled.

Newton’s 3rd Law of Motion states that in every force of action, there is an opposite and equal reaction.

Forces come in action-reaction pairs. This means that for every force there is a reaction force that is equal in size, but opposite in direction. That is to say that whenever an object pushes

another object it gets pushed back in the opposite direction equally hard.

Law of Interaction

If you push against the wall with a force, the wall pushes back against you with a force of equal strength but in the opposite direction.

Thank You Very Much!

Sources:www.wikipedia.comwww.google.com