A burnout is an example of friction, a large part of physics. A burnout occurs when a cars engine turns the wheels harder that the level of friction the tires of the car can hold. Once that level is reached the tires break traction and start to spin, as the tires spin faster and faster they heat up starting to burn the tire creating smoke which is what you see above.
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Nicholas Ruggiero
A burnout is an example of friction, a large part of physics. A burnout occurs when a cars engine turns the wheels harder that the level of friction the tires of the car can hold. Once that level is reached the tires break traction and start to spin, as the tires spin faster and faster they heat up starting to burn the tire creating smoke which is what you see above.
Nicholas Ruggiero
Here we have a picture of a man doing a hand stand on a motorcycle. This is a prime example of physics and how the rider is traveling at the same speed as the motorcycle is and is what makes this stunt very difficult and very dangerous. The proper way to do this stunt is to be extremely steady and keep as much of a persons weight lowest to the bike to keep the center of gravity low. This relates to physics in areas such as gravity, wind resistance, center of gravity and constant velocity.
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Fwd: physics blogs
Thank you,
Begin forwarded message:
From: Garry Deratus <garry_deratus@yahoo.com>
Date: December 13, 2013 at 5:04:49 PM EST
To: "miss.diane.crenshaw.jjphysics0113@blogger.com" <miss.diane.crenshaw.jjphysics0113@blogger.com>
Subject: physics blogs
Reply-To: Garry Deratus <garry_deratus@yahoo.com>
Signed, Garry Deratus
Blog #1Everyone recognizes when a momentum collision happens between two cars, but it also happens in sports. In this picture, we see that after two football players collide with each other, one football player is going forward and pushing the other back. This is an example of two forces using momentum against each other. Whether it's because the football player, moving forward, has more mass or speed, he had momentum allowing him to push the other football player.
Garry DeratusBlog #2When you go to the gym and do a warm-up set on bench press, you're actually pushing up way lass than you normally do. Now, you may think that when it comes to who is exerting more force between you or the barbell, it you because it's not heavy. WRONG! In actuality, you and the barbell with weights are exerting the same amount of force, according to Newton's 3rd Law, which says the forces of two bodies on each other are always equal and are directed in opposite directions.
Garry DeratusBlog #3When two people who are most likely similar in weight are racing, they exert force for a certain distance. Therefore they produce work. One runner finishes first, so you would think that he did more work than the other runner. What is interesting is that they produced the same amount of work. It is power in fact that the faster runner exerted more in. When it comes to power, time becomes a factor. So, since the faster runner finished in less time, he exerted more power than the other runner.
Fwd:
Sent from my iPhone
Begin forwarded message:
From: Mateusz Hader <mateuszhader@yahoo.com>
Date: December 18, 2013 at 10:40:55 AM EST
To: miss.diane.crenshaw.jjphysics0113@blogger.com
In the long throw performed by track and field athletes, the athlete uses centripetal force to propel the object as far as they can. Since the objects velocity is always changing, the athlete has to let go of the object at the proper time in order to properly aim for the trajectory.
-Mateusz Hader
Sent from my iPhone
Fwd:
Sent from my iPhone
Begin forwarded message:
From: Mateusz Hader <mateuszhader@yahoo.com>
Date: December 18, 2013 at 10:34:44 AM EST
To: miss.diane.crenshaw.jjphysics0113@blogger.com
In this car accident, the red sports car ran into the yellow pole. The cars momentum was not strong enough to go through the pole therefore causing the sports car to stop after colliding. The pole and sports car exerted the same amount of force to each other.
-Mateusz Hader
Sent from my iPhone
Fwd:
Sent from my iPhone
Begin forwarded message:
From: Mateusz Hader <mateuszhader@yahoo.com>
Date: December 18, 2013 at 10:31:58 AM EST
To: miss.diane.crenshaw.jjphysics0113@blogger.com
-Mateusz Hader
A game of tug of war represents the force of tension on the rope acted upon by both sides. The two people on the tight are exerting the same amount if force as the single person on the left because they are at equilibrium.
Sent from my iPhone
Newton's first law
Magnetic and Electric Force
Magnetic and Electric Force
Re: Newton's 1st Law in full effect
Gravitational Force
Gravitational force:
Measure of how hard earth pulls on an object, also called weight of an object, non contact force.
In this experiment 2 books. Both object hits the ground at the same time regardless their weight.
Acceleration of gravity of a free falling object on earth is 9.8m/s/s o's the same for all free falling object regardless of how long they been falling, or whether they were initially dropped from rest or thrown in the air.
Claire Tabuteau
Energy
Newton's Laws
Centripetal Force
-Ashley Cho-Quang-Sam
-Ashley Cho-Quang-Sam
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Soccer and Physics
Car Crashes
Energy Transfer
Cool demonstration on Gravity, wish we could do it!
Zero Gravity
IMPULSE
- \
- This cartoon originally referred to the invisible hand of the marketplace that the manager at left was using that as an excuse to lower the young guys pay, or even to bump him out of his job. I thought impulse was a good metaphor for what happens to the poor guys metaphorical momentum due to invisible forces he cannot control.
Momentum: types of collision
Just a little summary about collision. Remember initial momentum is always equal to final momentum.
There are 3 types of collision:
- All momentum is conserved (not surprisingly - it always is!)
- Kinetic energy is conserved (that's what makes this special).
- Relative speed of approach = relative speed of separation.
(So if one is catching the other at 10m/s before the collision, it will be moving apart from it at 10m/s after the collision)
- All momentum is conserved (as always).
- Kinetic energy is not conserved.
- The relative speed of separation is zero.
- All momentum is conserved (again).
- Kinetic energy is not conserved (again).
- You can't say anything about the speed at which they leave each other without doing a calculation Sevani Persaud.
Extreme Gravity from Centripetal Motion
Skate ramp, centripetal force, newton's 3rd law
Gravitational Energy
Re: Yellow cab accident
Yellow cab accident
Force applied by man on box post 3
This person is pushing a box and it is moving at constant speed with friction. So this means that the force of earth/ object and force of floor/ object are equal to each other. Also the force of friction/ object is equal to the force of person/object.
By Stephanie Carpio
School Crossword Pyramid
A pregnant woman pushing a shopping cart
Collisions
Gravitational energry converts to Kinetic energy
The image at the top represents a object at the top of the hill. When the object is at the top of the hill it has potential energy or gravitational energy; however, when it rolls down and almost reaches the ground the gravitational energy is converted to kinetic energy. Gravitational energy is stored energy. Kinetic energy is energy in motion.
By Stephanie Carpio
A pregnant woman pushing a shopping cart
Normal Force Diagram
Forces at Equilibrium
Monday, December 16, 2013
Energy Post#6
Momentum Blog Post #5
Fw: Newton's Third law blog post#4
Sent from my iPhone
Newton's Third law blog post#4
Sunday, December 15, 2013
Force diagram
Blue angels (momentum)
Energy flow (jackass)
Scene from jackass number 1.
Friday, December 13, 2013
Newton's Third Law Pair
physics blogs
On the way to work.
Emil Baez
EBmagination.com
fang gao blog 1-6
Physics 101 Blog #1
Japan Air Lines Flight 123
Everybody knows of the tragic accident of Japan Air Lines Flight 123 in August 12, 1985 near Mt. Fuji, killing more than 500 passengers and making it the deadliest aviation disaster involving a single aircraft in history. After official investigation, there are many physics-involved elements that took place before and during the event.
A few years before the accident, the same aircraft was involved in a minor tail-strike accident, in which the rear of the aircraft came into contact with the runway tarmac upon landing. The resulting friction damaged the rear pressure bulkhead, which is a dome-shaped cover located right under the tail that keeps the cabin and fuselage pressurized at a near sea-level temperature.
Since the movement controls were nearly all uncoordinated, the plane literally acquired a mind of its own. It began to fly up at a steep angle, where it reaches a point called "angle of attack", which is the minimum angle in which the plane's nose is lined up with the horizon before a stall takes places. With a steep angle, massive amount of friction is produced in the undercarriage as huge amount of air resistance slows the plane into a stall. The plane stalled, and the nose immediately falls downward, and the aircraft goes into a steep dive until it regained air speed and lift force and went back up again. JAL flight 123 had to endure this cycle several times within a 30 minute interval until it went into an unrecoverable nosedive and crashed straight into a mountain range, killing more than 500 passengers and crews and sparing only 4 survivors.
One last interesting thing to note was that the four survivors of JAL flight 123 were all seated in the very rear of the plane. When the plane struck ground, it went in as a nosedive at a very fast speed. Massive amount of momentum was exerted on to the aircraft, leaving the majority of plane parts and passengers alike mashed into compressed pieces of unrecognizable chunks. However, the majority of the rear tail section was still intact, due to the fact that all momentums required for the moving object to stop had been used and sparing the lives of some passengers at that location.
Physics Blog #2
Voyager 1 is a man-made satellite, and the first artificial object to be able to travel into interstellar space. Launched in 1977, Voyager 1 is currently traveling at 17 km per second, also making it the fastest man-made object, and at a distance of 19 billion km from Earth also makes it manmade's most distance object. But, how is the Voyager capable of traveling such distances, and at such speed?
Space is a vacuum and a frictionless environment. Without the influence of gravity or other intercepting objects, an object can travel on an on at the same speed and direction forever and ever. This is known as the constant velocity, in which an object's speed stays the same, without being influenced by acceleration.
The constant velocity of Voyager 1 is at 17 km/sec, which means that it would be the speed it will remain, possibly forever, if left undisturbed or not influenced by other gravitational forces.
Physics Blog #3
When a plane lands on an airport, it cannot depend on wheel brakes to slow down like cars and trains. Instead, it relies on an engine mechanism called reverse thrust (a.k.a. speed brakes). Just as thrust is required for a plane to speed up to obtain lift and to keep it airborne, reverse thrust is deployed to reverse the air flow of the engine. What happens during normal flight is that air is sucked in through the front, where the fan blades are located, compressed in a compressor, mixed and combusted along with jet fuel, and released through the rear nozzle in a very pressurized and rapid fashion, just like nitrous oxide on race cars. This flush of high pressurized air propels the plane forward, but when the opposite happens, the air is being diverted to other than the rear end, usually forced out from the side (as seen in the pictures and diagram above). The following aircraft force diagram is provided to give a better reference to the common forces affecting an airplane.
Blog #4:
Everybody knows the infamous San Andreas fault, a transform fault line located along the West coast of California that makes up the Eastern-most region of the Pacific's Ring of Fire. The San Andreas Fault is made up of two major tectonic plates, the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate, sliding against each other. The resulting friction of those two massive plates produced some of the most well known earthquakes such as the 1906 San Francisco quake and the 1989 Loma Prieta quake.
Why is the San Andreas fault transform the western landscape so much and at the same time, produced and will continue to produce destructive earthquakes? Well the crevices in between the two massive plates are even, but rather jagged, and for the sliding to occur won't be smooth, especially if the two plates got tangled up. When it happens, both plates would try to shove across each other, but only get more interlocked. The resulting forces may result in the landscape near the fault line to look wrinkled. Eventually if the area gets completely tangled, potential energy began to build up on the part where pressure is exerted the most, until one day the end snaps, releasing massive amount of energy when the plate suddenly shoved pass it in an instant, and the resulting shockwave is what produces the destructive force of earthquake.
Blog #5
Terminal Velocity vs Precipitation
Nearly all precipitation, rain, snow, sleet, or hail originated from clouds that are high up in the sky. But since they fall from such an extreme altitude, why don't they hit the earth in a rapid speed that would have probably left a crater on the ground after impact? When water vapor in clouds condenses, it forms into bigger droplets which eventually gets overtaken by the force of gravity and falls. For a while its falling speed increases. However, air resistance soon began to take over and pushed the precipitation from below. Eventually, the air resistance force would equal up with the gravitational force, in a situation called terminal velocity, and the precipitation fall rate stabilizes. The precipitation would maintain this fall rate until it makes contact with the ground or comes in contact with wind shears or other moving air along the way.
Blog #6
Air hockey is not only a type of fun game, but it also serve as a great representation of how objects can behave when forces of physics are being applied in an environment with no friction (and decreased air resistance). The lack of friction was emulated by the table vent fans blowing from the surface up, which allowed the puck to "float" with the air pushing its bottom. A puck was to remain stationary until initial force was applied, and it would move at a constant velocity, which means that it would not be accelerating, until an additional contact force was to be applied.