Unit Blog Summary- Unit
three
What did I learn this
unit?
Unit three shed light on forces, revealing the rules of
their interactions. We started with Newton’s third law every action has an
equal and opposite reaction. That led to the understanding of action reaction
pairs. An apple sitting on a table has the action reaction pair, “table pushes
apple up/ apple pulls table down”. With that basic foundation we were able to
build different rooms creating a home for forces. The first wall was the
problem of the horse and buggy, it also addressed the age old question of how
to win tug of war. The answer was quite simple apply more friction than the
other team. Since all forces are equal and opposite you can only pull as hard
on the other team as they pull on you, so whichever team has more friction with
the ground will win, accelerating the other team towards them. Next was
gravity, and how it affected tides. Gravity can be calculated by [ force of
gravity = (mass1)(mass2) / (distance)(distance) ]. Once the wall was up, we
made a window to understand the moon, and tides. We found out that there are
two high and low tides each day, each high and low are twelve hours away. Tides are caused by the difference in
gravitational forces on opposite sides of the earth.
The above image shows
the different types of tides, exemplifying how the movement of the moon decides
the height of tides. It is important to mention the Spring tides happen once
every 28 days, the length it takes for the moon to orbit the earth. The next
wall we built was made of momentum. Momentum is represented by P, and the
formulas for momentum and relating topics are bellow. Momentum cannot be
destroyed, it can only be transferred. We proved this in our lab, as we raced
the carts into each other. This lead to the question of how do you stop without
hurting yourself? The answer was to spread out your impulse, which is equal to
change in momentum. Impulse is equal to force (time). Since they multiply together
to reach their total they are directly proportional. When there is more time
less force is required to perform the same change in momentum, which will mean
less damage to the object. In all we
built an elaborate home for forces, building in small nuances in the base
boards and closets, creating a new horizon of understanding.
What are some things
students may have forgotten while working on this unit?
·
That gravity is proportional to distance
and mass
·
That every action has an equal and opposite
reaction
·
That impulse is not a force
·
Tides are caused by the difference in
forces felt on each side of the earth
·
That you can only push as hard as the
other person or object can push back
Formulas from the unit
- Change in Momentum= Impulse
- Momentum = mass ( velocity)
- Impulse = force (time)
- Change in momentum = final momentum – Initial momentum
How is this Relevant to
the real world?
This unit shows why things break, how tides work, why we
have tides, and how we walk, how to win in tug of war, and much more. Forces govern
the world we live in. This has been the most practical unit ye, showing
practical uses daily.
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