04_lecture
Chapter Overview
Title: Making Sense of the Universe: Understanding Motion, Energy, and Gravity
Describing Motion
Speed: Rate at which an object moves (e.g., 10 m/s).
Velocity: Speed with direction (e.g., 10 m/s, due east).
Acceleration: Change in velocity over time (units: m/s²).
Acceleration of Gravity
All objects fall with the same acceleration due to gravity, approximately g = 10 m/s² on Earth (ignoring air resistance).
Galileo demonstrated that g is constant regardless of mass.
Momentum and Force
Momentum = mass × velocity.
Any net force changes momentum, indicating acceleration.
Angular momentum relates to rotating objects.
Motion in Circular Paths
Angular momentum refers to objects moving in circles; requires torque for change.
Mass vs. Weight
Mass: Amount of matter in an object.
Weight: Force exerted on an object by gravity (you are weightless in free-fall).
Newton’s Laws of Motion
First Law: An object remains at constant velocity unless acted upon by a net force.
Second Law: Force = mass × acceleration or change in momentum.
Third Law: Every action has an equal and opposite reaction.
Gravitational Concepts
Gravitational force is weaker on the Moon, affecting weight but not mass.
Weightlessness in space results from free-fall.
Conservation of Energy
Energy cannot be created or destroyed; it can change forms.
Types of Energy
Kinetic: Energy of motion.
Potential: Stored energy (gravitational potential energy depends on mass, gravity, height).
Mass-energy: Represents energy contained in mass, described by E=mc².
Gravitational Dynamics
The strength of gravity depends on the mass of objects and the distance between their centers.
Newton's law of gravitation states every mass attracts every other mass.
Orbital Mechanics
Orbits can be bound (ellipses) or unbound (parabolas, hyperbolas).
Newton's laws allow calculation of total system mass from orbital characteristics.