Newton's Laws - Lesson 1 - Newton's First Law
of Motion
Newton's First Law
·
In a previous chapter of study,
the variety of ways by which motion can be described (words, graphs, diagrams, numbers,
etc.) was discussed. In this unit (Newton's Laws of Motion), the ways in which
motion can be explained will be discussed. Isaac Newton (a
17th century scientist) put forth a variety of laws that explain why objects
move (or don't move) as they do. These three laws have become known as Newton's
three laws of motion. The focus of Lesson 1 is Newton's first law of motion -
sometimes referred to as the law
of inertia.
An object at rest stays at rest and an object
in motion stays in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by an unbalanced force.
Two Clauses and a Condition
There are two clauses
or parts to this statement - one that predicts the behavior of stationary
objects and the other that predicts the behavior of moving objects. The two
parts are summarized in the following diagram.
The
behavior of all objects can be described by saying that objects tend to
"keep on doing what they're doing" (unless acted upon by an unbalanced force). If at rest, they
will continue in this same state of rest. If in motion with an eastward
velocity of 5 m/s, they will continue in this same state of motion (5 m/s,
East). If in motion with a leftward velocity of 2 m/s, they will continue in
this same state of motion (2 m/s, left). The state of motion of an object is
maintained as long as the object is not acted upon by an unbalanced force. All
objects resist changes in their state of motion - they tend to "keep on doing
what they're doing."
There
is an important condition that must be met in order for the first law to be
applicable to any given motion. The condition is described by the phrase
"... unless acted upon by an unbalanced force." As the long as the
forces are not unbalanced - that is, as long as the forces are balanced - the
first law of motion applies. This concept of a balanced versus and unbalanced
force will be discussed in more detail later in Lesson 1.
Suppose that you filled a baking dish to the rim with water and walked around an oval track making an attempt to complete a lap in the least amount of time. The water would have a tendency to spill from the container during specific locations on the track. In general the water spilled when:
Suppose that you filled a baking dish to the rim with water and walked around an oval track making an attempt to complete a lap in the least amount of time. The water would have a tendency to spill from the container during specific locations on the track. In general the water spilled when:
·
the
container was at rest and you attempted to move it
·
the
container was in motion and you attempted to stop it
·
the
container was moving in one direction and you attempted to change its
direction.
The water spills
whenever the state of motion of
the container is changed. The water resisted this change in its own state of
motion. The water tended to "keep on doing what it was doing." The
container was moved from rest to a high speed at the starting line; the water
remained at rest and spilled onto the table. The container was stopped near the
finish line; the water kept moving and spilled over container's leading edge.
The container was forced to move in a different direction to make it around a
curve; the water kept moving in the same direction and spilled over its edge.
The behavior of the water during the lap
around the track can be explained
by Newton's first law of motion.
Everyday Applications of
Newton's First Law
There
are many applications of Newton's first law of motion. Consider some of your
experiences in an automobile. Have you ever observed the behavior of coffee in
a coffee cup filled to the rim while starting a car from rest or while bringing
a car to rest from a state of motion? Coffee "keeps on doing what it is
doing." When you accelerate a car from rest, the road provides an
unbalanced force on the spinning wheels to push the car forward; yet the coffee
(that was at rest) wants to stay at rest. While the car accelerates forward,
the coffee remains in the same position; subsequently, the car accelerates out
from under the coffee and the coffee spills in your lap. On the other hand,
when braking from a state of motion the coffee continues forward with the same speed and in the
same direction, ultimately hitting the windshield or the dash. Coffee in
motion stays in motion.
Have you ever
experienced inertia (resisting changes in your state of motion) in an
automobile while it is braking to a stop? The force of the road on the locked
wheels provides the unbalanced force to change the car's state of motion, yet
there is no unbalanced force to change your own state of motion. Thus, you
continue in motion, sliding along the seat in forward motion. A person in
motion stays in motion with the same speed and in the same direction ... unlessacted upon by the unbalanced force of a seat belt. Yes! Seat belts are
used to provide safety for passengers whose motion is governed by Newton's
laws. The seat belt provides the unbalanced force that brings you from a state
of motion to a state of rest. Perhaps you could speculate what would occur when
no seat belt is used.
There are many more applications of Newton's first law of motion. Several applications are listed below. Perhaps you could think about the law of inertia and provide explanations for each application.
There are many more applications of Newton's first law of motion. Several applications are listed below. Perhaps you could think about the law of inertia and provide explanations for each application.
·
Blood
rushes from your head to your feet while quickly stopping when riding on a
descending elevator.
·
The
head of a hammer can be tightened onto the wooden handle by banging the bottom
of the handle against a hard surface.
·
A brick
is painlessly broken over the hand of a physics teacher by slamming it with a
hammer. (CAUTION: do not attempt this at home!)
·
To
dislodge ketchup from the bottom of a ketchup bottle, it is often turned upside
down and thrusted downward at high speeds and then abruptly halted.
·
Headrests
are placed in cars to prevent whiplash injuries during rear-end collisions.
·
While
riding a skateboard (or wagon or bicycle), you fly forward off the board when
hitting a curb or rock or other object that abruptly halts the motion of the
skateboard.
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