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Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position?...

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Page 1: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.
Page 2: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than

lighter ones when starting from the same position?

Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion has a constant

acceleration, what is this acceleration and how was it found?

How do we solve problems involving free fall?

Page 3: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

What happens ?

1) When you drop a rock from a cliff?Ans: It falls downward. 2) When a Skydiver jumps from a plane?Ans: He/She will fall to the ground. 3) To a skydiver’s speed as he is falling?Ans: It will reach a terminal velocity due to

air resistance.

Page 4: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Free-Fall Motion

An object moving under the influence of gravity only!!

Page 5: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Apollo 15 -Astronaut David Scott on the Moon (1971)

Hammer and Feather on the Moon

http://www.archive.org/details/NIX-LV-1998-00046

Page 6: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Galileo (1564 – 1642) and the leaning tower of Pisa.

Page 7: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Does Air Resistance Matter?

Page 8: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Air Resistance

The force of friction or drag acting on an object in a direction opposing its motion as it moves through air.

Page 9: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Hammer & Feather in the presence of air

Page 10: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Hammer & Feather in the absence of air

Page 11: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

If the free fall motion has a constant acceleration, what is this acceleration and how was it found?

Page 12: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Galileo’s Ball and Channel Experiment

http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/~barnes/ast110_06/rots/pftim19_01.png

Page 13: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Galileo’s Ball and Channel Experiment

He varied the starting position of the ball along the channel.

He measured the times for the ball to travel the various lengths.

He raised the channel until it was steep enough to simulate free fall.

Page 14: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Galileo’s Finding

“ We compared the time for the whole length with that for the half, or with that for two-thirds, or three-fourths, or indeed for any fraction; in such experiments, repeated a full hundred times, we always found that the spaces traversed were to each other as the squares of the times, and this was true for all inclinations of the plane, i.e., of the channel, along which we rolled the ball.

Page 15: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Distance (m) Time (s)

0 0

5 1

20 2

45 3

How Far?

Page 16: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

To Find Distance from t and g:

2

2

1tgtvx i

Page 17: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

How Fast?

Page 18: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Equations of Motion for Uniform Accelerated Motion (Kinematic Formulas)

2)4

)32

1)2

2)1

_

2

22

fi

if

i

if

vvv

tavv

tatvx

xavv

Page 19: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Example 1: Free Fall

A ball is dropped from rest from the top of a building. Find:

a) The instantaneous velocity of the ball after 6 sec.

b) How far the ball fell.c) The average velocity up to that point.

Answers: -60m/s, 180m, -30m/s

Page 20: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Example 2: Free Fall on the Moon

A hammer is dropped on the moon. It reaches the ground 1s later. If the distance it fell was 0.83m:

1. Calculate the acceleration due to gravity on the surface of the moon.

2. Calculate the velocity with which the hammer reached the ground and compare to the velocity it would have, if it was dropped on the earth’s surface.

Answer:-1.66m/s2, -1.66m/s, -9.8m/s

Page 21: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

The Velocity vs. Time Graph

Pictorial representation of velocity vs. time graph. As time increases, the

velocity increases in this graph.

The Slope of this graph gives us the acceleration of this object.

Page 22: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Do You Understand It?

Can you Describe the motion of this object? It’s Acceleration?

Ans : Zero Acceleration, Constant Velocity

Page 23: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Experimental Error

What if our values do not match g?

Remember question regarding terminal velocity

2/81.9 smg

Page 24: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Our Goal For Next Class

1) Perform an experiment to analyze a free-falling object.

2) Determine the value of g.

3) Enable you to solve problems dealing with free-falling objects.

Page 25: Questions: Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones when starting from the same position? Does air resistance matter? If the free fall motion.

Expermiental Error

We must calculate the percent error for each of our trials:

100%

True

alExperimentTrueerr


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