physics chapter three
Copernicus
Developed the first modern theory of a sun-centered universe
The law of inertia states that an object
*will remain at rest until acted on upon an outside force *will continue moving at the same velocity unless an outside force acts on it. *will continue moving in a straight line unless an outside force acts on it.
inertia
reluctance any material object has to change in its state of motion.
The following forces act on an object: 20-N North, 50-N South, and 40-N West. What is the magnitude of the net force?
50 N
After a cannon ball is fired into frictionless space, the amount of force needed to keep it going equals
0
A 10-N force and a 30-N force act on an object in opposite directions. What is the net force on the object?
20 N
On the surface of Jupiter the acceleration due to gravity is about 3 times that on Earth (10m/sec/sec) How much would a 100 Kg rock weigh on Jupiter? Force = mass x gravity
3000
Galileo
Publicized Copernicus's findings; used the telescope to study moon and planets; added discoveries concerning the laws of gravity; condemned by the Catholic church for his work.
The astronomer Copernicus was the first person to publicly state that the Earth
revolves around the sun
Newton
This physicist developed the law of universal gravitation and further caused the decline of the old system of science
the law of inertia applies to..
both moving and nonmoving objects
Whirl a rock at the end of a string and it follows a circular path. If the string breaks, the tendency of the rock is to
follow a straight line path
SI unit force
killogram
what is the difference between mass and weight?
mass is the amount of an object and weight is the force due to gravity. mass is a kilogram.
Which has more mass, a kilogram of feathers or a kilogram of iron?
neither the masses are equal
If a hockey puck slides on a perfectly frictionless surface it will...
not slow down
mass
the amount of matter in an object
net force
the combination of all forces that act on an object
Galileo found that a ball rolling down one inclined plane would roll how far up another inclined plane?
to nearly the same height as it originally started