Practical 2: Contact Forces Action-at-a-Distance Forces
Practical 2: Contact Forces Action-at-a-Distance Forces
Topic
Theoretical
knowledge
Contact Forces
Action-at-a-Distance Forces
Frictional Force
Tension Force
Normal Force
Air Resistance Force
Applied Force
Spring Force
Gravitational Force
Electrical Force
Magnetic Force
Type of Force
Description of Force
(and Symbol)
Applied Force
Fapp
Gravity Force
(also known as Weight)
Fgrav
Normal Force
Fnorm
Friction Force
Ffrict
Tension Force
Ftens
Spring Force
Fspring
Materials
:
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
A wooden block
A ping- pong ball
A stretched wire on a wooden block
A beaker
A book
Procedures :
1. A wooden block is placed on the floor. The wooden block has been
given a push and the observation is recorded.
2. A ping- pong ball is thrown up into the air. The observation is
recorded.
3. A piece of wire was tie tightly between 2 nails hammered into a
piece of wood. The wire has been touched. The observation is
recorded.
4. A ping- pong ball is placed in a beaker of water. The ball has been
tried to pushing into the water. The observation is recorded.
5. A book is placed on the palm of my hand. The observation is
recorded.
6. The inferences for each of these observations are stated like in the
table below.
Results
Procedures
Observation
Inferences
The wooden block moved
because a force has been
applied on the wooden
Procedure 1
Procedure 2
wooden block.
The ping- pong was going
Procedure 5
Conclusion : The inferences are accepted. This is because there were such forces
that have been contact with the objects that have been used in this
Theoretical
knowledge
moving on inclined planes were carried out by Galileo Galilei (15641642). Freely falling objects are objects not supported by anything and
not acted on by any forces except the gravitational force. Near the
surface of the earth such objects are accelerating. This acceleration is
due to the gravitational force acting between the objects and the earth.
The direction of the gravitational acceleration vector is towards the
center of the earth. Its magnitude decreases as one over the square of
the distance from the center of the earth. The radius of the earth is
6368 km. If you climb a 1000 m high mountain, your distance from the
center of the earth changes by (1/6368)100 % = 0.016 % and the
magnitude of the acceleration vector changes by (1/6368) 2100 % = 2.4
10-6 %. For all objects near the surface of the earth the distance from
the center is nearly constant, and the magnitude of the gravitational
acceleration vector is therefore approximately constant. We denote the
gravitational acceleration vector by g. Its magnitude is g = 9.8 m/s2 and
its direction is straight downward. Over small distances, when the
curvature of the earth's surface can be neglected, the direction of the
gravitational acceleration vector is also nearly constant.
Near the surface of the earth g is the same for all objects. All
objects accelerate at approximately the same rate.
Freely falling
free-falling
objects
are
accelerating
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
vi.
vii.
A ticker- timer
Ticker tape
Clamp
Power pack
Connecting wires
Masses of 300g, 450g, and 600g
Cello tape
Procedures :
1. A chair is placed on top of a table. A ticker- timer was clamp onto the
upper side of the chair.
2. A piece of ticker tape is fixed through the ticker- timer and then a
300g mass was cellotape to the tape.
3. The ticker- timer was switch on and the mass was let to fall freely
downwards.
4. The tape was cut into 2 dots strips and arranged to form a graph.
5. Step 3 is repeated by using masses of 450g and 600g.
6. A graph for each case was build from their strips and then was
determined their acceleration.
Diagram of experiment
Results
:
Mass (g)
Acceleration (ms-2)
300
9.5
450
10.1
600
11.6
Conclusion : As the conclusion, my friend and I have found out that every object in
this world have the same mass. It also has the same acceleration while
1. In activity 1, we have done the experiment for identify the different types of
force in different contexts.
2. There were several types of forces such as tension, thrust, normal, weight
and friction.
3. All of these forces always happen in our daily life. So, I had prepared the
table to list the forces that happen for each procedure.
Diagrams
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
4. In this experiment, we can reduce the resistance by use the oil so that the
friction coefetion, can be reducing. We also can use the ball barring in
our daily life so that there will be no more problems about the resistance
that have made by the surface.
5. Students also need to know the name of force too. This is because; they
will not know and cannot recognize the forces that have been contact on
the object the used.
6. Newton's Second Law of Motion is concerned with the effect that
unbalanced forces have on motion.
7. An unbalanced force acting on an object causes it to accelerate. There are
two points to note about the acceleration of an object when an unbalanced
force acts on it:
The bigger the unbalanced force acting on the object the bigger the acceleration of
the object.
The more mass the object has the more inclined it is to resist any change in its
motion. For example, if you apply the same unbalanced force to a mass of 1000 kg
and a mass of 1 kg, the acceleration (change in motion) of the 1000 kg mass will
be much less than that of the 1 kg mass.
8. Newton's Second Law provides a relationship between the unbalanced
force on the object, the mass of the object and the acceleration that is
produced: unbalanced force = mass x acceleration or F = ma.
9. The unbalanced force F is measured in newtons (N), the mass m is
measured in kilograms (kg) and acceleration a is measured in metres per
second per second (m/s2).
10. The force can be group into 4 groups of forces. There are:
a) The strong force- The strongest of all the forces but it is effective
only at short separations. At greater distances, this force is
negligible.
b) The weak force- It is stronger than the gravitational force. The weak
force is exerted between a class of particles called the leptons and
hadrons.
c) The electromagnetic force- Electric and magnetic forces are very
closely related and are unified into one force w/c is the
mg = ma
18. So, the acceleration that we got from the graph for each mass must be
equal to the weight force that cause of the gravity force.
19. We can use the calculation below to get the acceleration for each mass.
v - u=
t = 4 pieces of ticker tape 0.04s
a = v u/ t (ms-2)
21. So, for each mass, their acceleration is:
300g
u = 9.6/ 0.04
= 240
v = 15.7/ 0.04
= 392.5
450g
u = 4.8/ 0.04
v = 11.8/ 0.04
= 120
= 295
600g
u = 3.0/ 0.04
v = 10.4/ 0.04
= 75
= 260
260 75 = 185
a = 185 / 0.16
= 1156.3 cms-2 or 11.6 ms-2
25. The farther you are from the center of the planet, the weaker the pull
between the planet and your body. The force gets weaker quite rapidly.
26. The equation is like below:
a) The two "M's" on top are your mass and the planet's mass.
b) The "r" below is the distance from the center of the planet.
27. So, the acceleration of the graph for 600g can be take at it first dot is
because it has the greater mass. So, it already has the acceleration that
equal to the gravity pulls at the first dot in this experiment.
28. While the acceleration for the smaller mass such as 300g just can be equal
to the gravity is at the last dot because the nearest you the Earth, the
greatest the gravity pulls on yours.
Questions:
1. Are the values of acceleration of the different masses obtained equal
to g (acceleration due to gravity on earth)? Explain.
Yes. This is because every object on Earth with any masses will
free falling with the same acceleration. This meant that the
gravity pulls or weight force on the Earth is same which is 9.8
ms-2. So, each of mass should have the same acceleration.
What have made it to be slow or faster during the free falling is
the resistance that made by the air.
falling object?
The force is same to every object on the Earth although the
mass was different while free falling which is the acceleration is
9.8 ms-2.
3. If this experiment was done on the moon, will the value of
acceleration of the different masses obtained be equal to g? Explain.
No. It is because the moon has no gravity pulls or weight force.
So, there will be no weight. It is our mass. Its means that every
object has their own mass but do not have weight. So, there will
be no acceleration that could be calculated. It also should be
not equal to the gravity, g.
Resources
http://www.physicsclassroom.com/Class/1DKin/U1L5a.cfm
http://www.mindbites.com/lesson/4497-physics-free-falling-objects
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free-fall_%28disambiguation%29
Latih Tubi; Fizik; SPM; Chang See Leong
Longman; Pre- U Text STPM; Physics Volume 1; Cheong Foon Choong