Lesson 4 | Newton’s Third Law
Lesson 4 | Newton's Third Law
Student Labs and Activities
Launch Lab Content Vocabulary Lesson Outline MiniLab Content Practice A Content Practice B Math Skills School to Home Key Concept Builders Enrichment Challenge Lab A Lab B Lab C Chapter Key Concepts Builder
Page
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The Laws of Motion
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Name
Date
Class
Launch Lab
LESSON 4: 10 minutes
How do opposite forces compare?
If you think about forces you encounter every day, you might notice forces that occur in pairs. For example, if you drop a rubber ball, the falling ball pushes against the floor. The ball bounces because the floor pushes with an opposite force against the ball. How do these opposite forces compare?
Procedure
1. Read and complete a lab safety form.
2. Stand so that you face your lab partner, about half a meter away. Each of you should hold a spring scale.
3. Hook the two scales together, and gently pull them away from each other. Notice the force reading on each scale.
4. Pull harder on the scales, and again notice the force readings on the scales.
5. Continue to pull on both scales, but let the scales slowly move toward your lab partner and then toward you at a constant speed.
Data and Observations
Copyright ? Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Think About This
1. Identify the directions of the forces on each scale.
2.
Key Concept Describe the relationship you noticed between the force readings
on the two scales.
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The Laws of Motion
Name
Date
Class
Content Vocabulary
LESSON 4
Newton's Third Law
Directions: On each line, write the term from the word bank that correctly replaces the underlined words in each sentence.
force pair momentum
law of conservation of momentum Newton's third law of motion
1. If two objects are moving at the same speed, the object with more mass has more of a measure of how hard it is to stop a moving object.
2. A set of forces that two objects apply to each other does not result in a net force of zero because each force acts on a different object.
3. The transfer of momentum between two or more objects is described by the law that states that the total momentum of a group of objects remains the same unless outside forces such as friction act on the objects.
4. The motion that occurs when a skateboarder pushes on a wall is described by the law that states that when one object exerts a force on a second object, the second object exerts an equal force in the opposite direction on the first object.
Copyright ? Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
The Laws of Motion
65
Name
Date
Class
Lesson Outline
LESSON 4
Newton's Third Law
A. Opposite Forces
1. When an object applies a force on another object, the second object applies a force
of the same
on the first object.
2. When an object exerts a force on another object, the second object exerts a force
on the first object in the
direction.
B. Newton's Third Law of Motion
1. According to
, when one object applies a force on a
second object, the second object applies an equal force in the opposite direction on
the first object.
2. Any time a person
against a stationary object, the
object exerts an equal and opposite force on the person.
3. A(n)
is the forces that two objects apply to each other.
a. The forces in a force pair are equal in strength and act in directions. They do not cancel each other out because each acts on a
different
.
b. For every action force, there is a reaction force that is equal in
action force.
but opposite in
of the
C. Using Newton's Third Law of Motion
1. When you push against an object, the force you apply is called the
force.
2. Newton's third law establishes that the object you push on applies an equal and
opposite
force against you.
3. According to Newton's second law of motion, when the reaction force results in
an unbalanced force, there is a(n) accelerates.
force, and the object
D. Momentum
1.
is a measure of how hard it is to stop a moving object.
2. Momentum is the product of an object's
and
its
.
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Lesson Outline continued
3. According to Newton's second law of motion, the force on an object is equal to the
mass of the object multiplied by the acceleration, or the in the object's velocity.
4. Because momentum is the product of mass and velocity, the force on an object
equals its change in
.
E. Conservation of Momentum
1. In any collision, one object transfers
to another object.
2. According to the
, the total momentum of a group of
objects remains the same unless outside forces act on the objects.
3. One outside force is
, which decreases the velocities of
billiard balls and most other moving objects, and they lose momentum.
4. In a(n) other.
collision, the colliding objects bounce off each
5. In a(n)
collision, the colliding objects stick together.
6. In elastic and inelastic collisions, the total objects is always the same before and after any collision.
of all the
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The Laws of Motion
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