CHAPTER 5 | GRAVITY 79
Fundamentals 1). Now imagine that, instead of tossing a
paper clip, someone tosses you a bowling ball. A bowling ball con-
tains much more mass than a paper clip and therefore has much
greater momentum, even though it is moving at the same velocity.
Newton’s second law of motion is about forces. Where
Galileo spoke only of accelerations, Newton saw that an accelera-
tion is the result of a force acting on a mass (Figure 5-5b).
Newton’s second law is commonly written as
F ma
As always, you must defi ne terms carefully when you look at
an equation. An acceleration is a change in velocity, and a veloc-
ity is a directed speed. Most people use the words speed and veloc-
ity interchangeably, but they mean two diff erent things. Speed is
a rate of motion and does not have any direction associated with
it, but velocity does. If you drive a car in a circle at 55 mph, your
speed is constant, but your velocity is changing because your
direction of motion is changing. An object experiences an accel-
eration if its speed changes or if its direction of motion changes.
Every automobile has three accelerators—the gas pedal, the brake
pedal, and the steering wheel. All three change the car’s velocity.
In a way, the second law is just common sense; you experience
its consequences every day. Th e acceleration of a body is propor-
tional to the force applied to it. If you push gently against a grocery
cart, you expect a small acceleration. Th e second law of motion also
says that the acceleration depends on the mass of the body. If your
grocery cart is fi lled with bricks and you push it gently, you expect
Newton’s fi rst law of motion is really a restatement of
Galileo’s law of inertia. An object continues at rest or in uniform
motion in a straight line unless acted on by some force.
Astronauts drifting in space will travel at constant rates in
straight lines forever if no forces act on them (■ Figure 5-5a).
Newton’s fi rst law also explains why a projectile continues to
move after all forces have been removed—for instance, how an
arrow continues to move after leaving the bowstring. Th e object
continues to move because it has momentum. You can think of
an object’s momentum as a measure of its amount of motion.
An object’s momentum is equal to its velocity times its mass.
A paper clip tossed across a room has low velocity and therefore
little momentum, and you could easily catch it in your hand. But
the same paper clip fi red at the speed of a rifl e bullet would have
tremendous momentum, and you would not dare try to catch it.
Momentum also depends on the mass of an object (Focus on
Mass
O
ne of the most fundamental
parameters in science is mass, a
measure of the amount of matter in
an object. A bowling ball, for example,
contains a large amount of matter and so is
more massive than a child’s rubber ball of the
same size.
Mass is not the same as weight. Your
weight is the force that Earth’s gravity exerts
on the mass of your body. Because gravity
pulls you downward, you press against the
bathroom scale, and you can measure your
weight. Floating in space, you would have no
weight at all; a bathroom scale would be
useless. But your body would still contain the
same amount of matter, so you would still
have the same mass you do on Earth.
Sports analogies illustrate the importance
of mass in dramatic ways. A bowling ball, for
example, must be massive to have a large
effect on the pins it strikes. Imagine trying to
knock down all the pins with a balloon
instead of a bowling ball. In space, where the
bowling ball would be weightless, a bowling
ball would still have more effect on the pins
than a balloon would. On the other hand,
runners want track shoes that have low mass
so that they are easy to move. Imagine trying
to run a 100-meter dash wearing track shoes
that were as massive as bowling balls. It
would be diffi cult to accelerate away from the
starting blocks. Finally, think of the shot put.
It takes muscle because the shot is massive,
not because it is heavy. Imagine throwing the
shot in space where it would have no weight.
It would still be massive, and it would take
great effort to start it moving.
Mass is a unique measure of the amount of
material in an object. Using the metric system
(Appendix A), mass is measured in kilograms.
1
MASS | ENERGY | TEMPERATURE AND HEAT | DENSITY | PRESSURE
Fun
pape
tains
grea
Gali
tion
New
an e
i i
Newton’s fi rst law of motion is really a restatement of
G lil ’ l f i i A bj i i if
■ Table 5-1 ❙ Newton’s Three Laws of
Motion
I. A body continues at rest or in uniform motion in a straight
line unless acted on by some force.
II. The acceleration of a body is inversely proportional to its
mass, directly proportional to the force, and in the same
direction as the force.
III. To every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.
100
kg
Mass is not the
same as weight.