FORCE and MOTION
FORCE and MOTION
FORCE
A force is a push or a pull.
It describes the interaction between two objects. .
A force is a vector quantity. It has a magnitude as well as direction.
2 Types of Quantity
1. SCALAR QUANTITY – has magnitude alone.
Example of scalar quantities are distance, speed, volume, mass, temperature, power, energy,
and time.
Distance- is the measure of the interval between two locations measured along the actual
path. Examples: 12 meters, 14 km, 5 miles
Speed- tells how fast an object is moving. Example 5m/s.
Volume- is the quantity of 3-d space occupied by a liquid, solid, or gas. Commons units of
volume include liters, cubic meter, gallons, milliliters, teaspoons, and ounces. Example 1.5 L
Mass- quantity of matter that a body contains. Example 45 kg.
Temperature- is the measurement of how hot or cold an object is. It is measured by a
thermometer or a calorimeter. In another context, temperature is a measure of internal energy
of a system. Example 37 ̊Celcius, 76 ̊Fahrenheit, 0 Kelvin
Power- rate at which work is done. Example 1308 J/s. (J= joules)
Energy- ability to perform work. Example 33.75 Joules
Time- is the ongoing sequence of events taking place. The past, present, and the future. The
basic unit of time is second (s). Example 5 o’clock in the morning.
2. VECTOR QUANTITY – has both magnitude and direction. Example of vector quantities
are force, velocity, acceleration, displacement, and momentum.
Velocity- the rate at which an object changes its position. Example 55 mi/hr, east.
Acceleration- the rate at which an object changes its velocity. An object is accelerating if its
changing its velocity. Example 10 m/s, SE.
Displacement- is the measure of the interval between two locations measured along the
shortest path connecting them. Example 2.7 km, N.
Momentum- defined as “mass in motion. All objects have mass; so if an object is moving,
then it has momentum- it has mass in motion. Example, the bowling ball is moving 10
kg∙m/s westward.
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