Friction

37
Newton’s 3 rd Law You cannot touch without being touched- Newton's third law.

Transcript of Friction

Page 1: Friction

Newton’s 3rd Law

You cannot touch without being touched-Newton's third law.

Page 2: Friction

Newton’s 3rd Law

• Notice the pair of forces – They are equal and opposite. They act on different objects.

Page 3: Friction
Page 4: Friction

Equal and Opposite Forces

• Ouch!!!!!!!

Take a look at this web site to watch an old car crash!!!!

Page 5: Friction

Equal but Opposite Forces

• Ouch!!

Notice the difference with crumple zones!!

Page 6: Friction

Friction• Friction is the result of contact between the

two surfaces• Is friction good or bad? it depends.

Page 7: Friction

How to Increase Friction• Increase friction by

adding sand to the road, add rosin to fingers in baseball, add rosin to the violin bow, a dragster spinning its wheels to heat them up, adding chains or studs to your tires when the road is icy,

Page 8: Friction

How to Decrease Friction

• Decrease friction by waxing your skis, coating the frying pan with oil, adding oil to your cars engine, adding water to your water slide.

Page 9: Friction

Friction is a Force

• What direction does the frictional force point?

• It is always in the opposite direction of the velocity – It opposes the motion.

Page 10: Friction

Friction has Direction

• What direction is the frictional force?

• DEB - a) block sliding down the hill

• b) block sliding up the hill

• c) car driving east

• d) sky diver falling toward the earth

• e) car going around a curve

Page 11: Friction
Page 12: Friction

Factors which affect FRICTION

• 1. the nature of the surface, coefficient of friction, Mu

• 2. the weight of the object, W

• 3. the normal force, FN

Page 13: Friction

4 Types of FRICTION

• Static Friction

• Kinetic Friction

• Rolling Friction

• Fluid Friction

Page 14: Friction

• Static frictional forces are due to the bonding between surfaces.

• The equation that describes the static friction, Ff

• Ffs = s FN or F = UN

Page 15: Friction

Static Friction

• Static Friction is the force between the two surfaces.

• Objects will not move until forces exceed static friction.

Another example of Newton’s 3rd Law

Page 16: Friction

Static vs Kinetic Friction

Page 17: Friction

Notice that the applied force is increasing yet no movement

Page 18: Friction

Notice that once F exceeds Fs the block starts to move, accelerates, and Fk is less than Fs

Page 19: Friction

Coefficient of Friction -

s This is the

coefficient of friction and is unitless.

It is the ratio of Ff : FN

Ff

Ff

Page 20: Friction

Static Friction

• 1) If you pull a 40 kg crate with a force of 100 N East and there is no movement, How large is the frictional force and in what direction?

Page 21: Friction

Problem

• A large 50 kg wooden crate rests on a stone lab table. The coefficient of static friction between wood and stone is 0.4

• DEB – a) What is the largest force needed to start the crate accelerating?

Page 22: Friction

Surfaces

s f

rubber on concrete 0.80 0.65

rubber on wet concrete 0.60 0.40

wood on wood 0.50 0.20

steel on steel 0.04 0.04

Page 23: Friction

Kinetic Friction or Sliding Friction• Slide a block along

different sides. Which Force is larger?

• F1 = F2 Since N is

the same, the frictional force is the same

F1

F2

Page 24: Friction

Static and Kinetic Friction

• Friction is not proportional to the velocityor as Velocity increases, Frictional

forces remain the same.

• Demo- block pull with spring scale. Same value no matter which side is pulled

Page 25: Friction

Sliding Down an Incline

• Draw a FBD for a 6 kg block on a 30° incline.

Page 26: Friction

Sliding Down an Incline

• DEB - Draw a FBD for a 6 kg block on a 30 ° incline.

Page 27: Friction

The Sliding Student!

• Demo - Determine the s for a

student sliding down a wooden board or coin on a book.

• Measure the angle when student starts to slide.

Draw the FBD

Page 28: Friction

Static Friction

= tan • derivation

Page 29: Friction

Rolling Friction

• 3. Rolling Friction is less than sliding friction. This occurs when one object rolls over another.

• Ex. Car, roller skates, ball bearings

Page 30: Friction

Fluid Friction

• Fluid Friction - object in contact with a fluid i.e.. water or air

• The magnitude depends upon the speed. V increases, Ff increases

Page 31: Friction

Fluid Friction• So when the fluid

friction becomes as large as the weight,

F = 0, a = 0, and the object is at constant velocity.

Page 32: Friction

Racing Parachutists

• Which parachutist will have greater terminal velocity and get to the ground first?

Page 33: Friction

Terminal Velocity

Page 34: Friction

DEB – Draw the v vs t graph

for an object that

falls through the air towards the earth.

Page 35: Friction

Terminal Velocity

As t increases what happens to the accel?

Page 36: Friction

Terminal Velocity

DEB – Predict which has the highest and lowest TV.

Object Terminal Velocity

baseball

basketball

ping pong ball

& Raindrop

Page 37: Friction

Terminal Velocity

Object Terminal Velocity

baseball 43 m/s

basketball 20 m/s

ping pong ball

& Raindrop

9 m/s