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Newton's second law | Physics | Khan Academy

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    - [Instructor] Today in the gym,
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    when my wife was doing dumbbell curls,
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    I started wondering, see,
    she's putting a force
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    on that dumbbell upwards, right?
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    But does that force stay a constant
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    as she moves the dumbbell up or not?
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    Does it change? And if it does
    change, how does it change?
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    Does it increase, does it
    decrease? What happens to it?
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    Guess what.
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    We can answer this question by the end
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    of this video using Newton's second law.
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    So let's start with a simpler example.
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    We have a ice hockey ground over here,
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    and there's a puck moving
    on top of it at some speed.
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    If there are no frictional
    forces acting on this,
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    if you assume that, then the
    forces acting on this puck
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    would be balanced because in
    the horizontal, you can see
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    that there are no forces
    because we're ignoring friction.
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    And in the vertical,
    the gravitational force,
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    which is pulling down on
    it is completely balanced
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    by the force that the
    ground is pushing up on it,
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    the normal force, they balance it out.
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    And so since there are no
    unbalanced forces acting
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    on this puck from Newton's first law,
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    we know that this thing will
    continue its state of rest,
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    or in this particular case,
    the state of uniform motion.
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    So it'll continue to move
    with that same velocity.
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    But now comes the question,
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    what if there was an
    unbalanced force acting on it?
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    What happens because of that?
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    Well, let's find out.
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    For that, let's just whack
    it with a hockey stick.
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    No.
    (instructor laughing)
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    So if I whack it to the
    right, let's say in this case,
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    I will now put an unbalanced
    force to the right.
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    What will happen? Well,
    we can probably guess it.
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    That puck's velocity will now be higher.
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    It'll just get blasted off over there.
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    So its velocity will increase.
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    In other words, it will accelerate.
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    Ooh, this means when there's
    an unbalanced force acting
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    on a an object, in other words,
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    if there is a non-zero net
    force acting on an object,
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    which is the same thing as
    saying an unbalanced force,
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    but whenever this net
    force acts on an object,
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    what does it do?
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    It accelerates our puck.
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    The puck undergoes, or the
    object undergoes an acceleration.
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    This is the essence of
    Newton's second law.
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    Now all we gotta do is
    analyze the situation
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    even more carefully
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    and see if we can concretize
    this relationship.
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    So let's do that.
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    The first question we could have is yeah,
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    so a net force causes an acceleration,
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    but how long does that acceleration last?
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    Well, let's see.
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    When the stick hits the puck,
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    that's when it starts accelerating,
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    which means as long as
    the stick is in contact
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    with the puck, as long as
    it's in contact with it,
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    like right now here, it's during that time
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    there will be acceleration.
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    But what happens once it loses contact?
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    Once it loses contact, again,
    net force goes to zero.
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    And now coming back to Newton's first law,
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    it'll continue moving with
    that same increased velocity.
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    This means the acceleration only happened
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    during this time when the hockey stick
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    was in contact with it.
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    In other words, the
    acceleration lasts as long
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    as the net force lasts.
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    Okay, next, let's think
    about what would happen
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    if the net force was higher?
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    For that let's imagine
    we whacked it harder.
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    What's gonna happen now?
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    Or you can imagine it'll get
    blasted off even more faster,
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    even faster, right?
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    Which means it'll have a higher velocity
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    when it loses contact.
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    Ooh, that means there'll
    be bigger acceleration.
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    So if the net force is larger,
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    it means you'll have
    a larger acceleration.
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    If the net force is smaller,
    you get a smaller acceleration.
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    In other words, we see
    a direct relationship
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    between acceleration and the net force.
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    All right, what else can we deduce?
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    Hey, let's think about the direction.
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    What is the direction of the acceleration?
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    Well, in this case, the
    net force is to the right,
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    and our puck's velocity
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    is also increasing towards the right.
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    So in this case, the
    acceleration is to the right.
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    So in this case, if the
    net force is to the right,
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    the acceleration is to the right.
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    What would happen if the
    net force was to the left?
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    So let's imagine we whack that puck now
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    to the left, what would happen?
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    Well, we can again imagine the puck
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    would now get blasted off to the left.
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    But let's look at it carefully.
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    Since the puck is already moving
    to the right, if we push it
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    to the left, now we're gonna slow it down.
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    The puck will come to a stop first.
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    It'll happen very quickly
    that we won't even see it.
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    But it has to happen before
    going to the left, right?
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    Which means when you go from here to here,
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    notice even though the puck
    is moving to the right,
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    it is slowing down, which
    means the acceleration
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    is to the left.
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    So when the net force is to the left,
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    we're seeing an
    acceleration is to the left.
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    After that, its velocity
    might increase to the left,
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    which means again, the
    acceleration is to the left.
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    Ooh.
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    So if the net force is to the left,
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    the acceleration is to the left.
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    If the net force is to the right,
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    the acceleration is to the right.
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    So the acceleration will
    be in the same direction
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    as that of the net force.
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    Okay, is there anything else
    that affects our acceleration?
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    Well, let's see.
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    If you come back over here,
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    what if you use the same bat,
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    whacked it with the same force,
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    but instead of a puck,
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    let's say there was a bowling ball
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    moving with the same velocity.
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    What would happen now?
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    (instructor laughing)
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    I'm pretty sure you can
    feel it in your bones now.
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    It would be much harder
    to stop that bowling ball
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    and make it turn backwards, right?
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    I mean, the same thing will happen.
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    You will slow it down, but
    it'll be much, much harder.
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    It'll take a much longer
    time to slow it down,
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    even though you're putting
    the same amount of force.
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    So the net force has stayed the same.
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    But what has happened to our acceleration?
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    Since the velocity changed
    over a much longer time,
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    the acceleration became smaller.
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    Hey, why did the
    acceleration became smaller?
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    What changed?
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    From the puck to the bowling
    ball, the mass changed,
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    the mass increased.
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    So this means mass also
    affects the acceleration,
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    but how does it affect it?
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    Well, we saw that the
    mass increased right now.
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    What did that do to the acceleration?
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    It decreased, and this
    is kind of intuitive.
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    The bigger the mass, the
    harder it is to accelerate,
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    meaning the smaller the acceleration,
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    which means acceleration
    has an inverse relationship
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    with the mass.
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    So now, everything that we just
    analyzed about acceleration,
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    its direction, its
    dependency on the net force,
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    how it depends on the mass,
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    all of it can be put down in an equation.
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    And that equation is pretty
    much right in front of us.
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    So the acceleration will
    equal the net force divided
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    by the mass.
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    This is our Newton's second law.
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    And look, the equation
    is saying the same thing.
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    Direct relationship between acceleration
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    and the net force, inverse
    relationship between acceleration
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    and the mass and the arrowheads are saying
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    that acceleration and the
    net force will always be
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    in the same direction.
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    Isn't it amazing that we can pack all
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    of that information in just
    one beautiful equation?
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    And of course, you may
    have seen this written
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    as f equals ma in some
    sources, it's the same thing.
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    I like to write it this way
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    because acceleration
    is caused by the force.
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    So once we decide the
    force is and the mass,
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    then the acceleration gets fixed.
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    But anyways, what will happen
    if the net force is zero?
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    What if we plug in over here zero?
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    Well, then the acceleration
    also goes to zero.
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    What does this mean?
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    Well, this means we have all
    the balance forces acting
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    on an object.
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    And if the acceleration is zero, it means
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    that the velocity stays a constant.
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    In other words, this
    is Newton's first law,
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    which says an object
    continues to stay at rest
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    or in uniform motion.
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    That is zero acceleration, right?
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    When there are no unbalanced
    forces acting on it.
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    So notice, Newton's first
    law is just a special case
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    of Newton's second law,
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    which means this equation is
    encompassing both the second
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    and the first law as well.
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    And finally, speaking
    about Newton's first law,
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    what we also noticed over
    here is bigger the mass,
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    smaller the acceleration.
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    In other words, if the mass
    is bigger, it is harder
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    to change its velocity.
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    It's much harder to do
    that, which means objects
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    that have more mass have more inertia.
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    That's something again we
    learned in Newton's first law.
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    Inertia is the property due
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    to which objects continue to stay at rest
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    or continue to stay in
    uniform motion, isn't it?
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    It can fight acceleration,
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    and we can now see what
    inertia depends on.
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    Inertia is the mass.
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    More the mass of an
    object, more than inertia,
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    harder it is to accelerate.
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    Newton's second law could arguably be
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    the most important equation
    of all of classical physics.
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    I say classical physics
    because we now know
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    that if objects are moving
    very close to speed of light,
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    then this breaks down, it doesn't work.
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    Now we'll have to resort
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    to Einstein's theory of relativity.
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    On the other extreme,
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    if we consider extremely tiny particles,
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    like subatomic particles like electrons,
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    protons, and neutrons,
    well, even over there,
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    turns out Newton's laws don't work.
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    So even over there, it breaks down.
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    But as long as you don't
    go to such extremes,
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    this equation will work for us.
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    So now let's see if we can apply this
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    to our original question.
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    When she just started moving the dumbbell,
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    dumbbell's velocity was increasing.
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    After that, let's say
    there was a small phase
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    during which the velocity was constant,
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    and finally, when the
    dumbbell is about to stop,
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    its velocity is decreasing.
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    So now the question is how
    do we figure out what happens
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    to the force that she's
    putting on the dumbbell?
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    Well, let's apply Newton's second law.
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    For that, let's first think
    about the acceleration.
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    Well, over here, we are dealing
    with increasing velocity.
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    Therefore, the acceleration is upwards
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    in the same direction as it's moving.
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    Then we have a constant velocity,
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    which means the acceleration is zero.
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    Finally, we have a decreasing velocity,
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    since the dumbbell is still
    going up, decreasing velocity,
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    which means acceleration must be down
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    in the opposite direction.
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    Now, because we know the
    direction of the acceleration,
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    we can figure out the
    direction of the net force.
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    It has to be exactly
    the same, upwards here,
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    zero here, downwards here.
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    We are applying Newton's second law,
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    the direction part over here.
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    Now, finally, this is the
    direction of the net force.
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    We want to know what happens to the force
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    that we are putting on the dumbbell
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    or she's putting on the dumbbell actually.
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    How do we do that?
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    Well, let's look at all the
    forces acting on the dumbbell.
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    Well, we know that there's
    gravitational force acting
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    on the dumbbell all the time.
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    That force is a constant,
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    and therefore, our force is
    in the opposite direction
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    of the gravitational force.
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    Now, in this case, when she's
    just lifting the dumbbell,
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    if the net force needs to be upwards,
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    that means her force must be larger
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    than the gravitational force.
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    Only then her force will win out,
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    giving a net upward force, right?
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    Okay, what about over here?
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    We want the net force
    to be zero over here.
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    How can that happen?
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    Ah, her force has to be exactly the same
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    as gravitational force
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    because only then the forces get balanced.
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    Finally, what happens over here?
  • 10:54 - 10:56
    Well, we want the net
    force to be downwards,
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    which means we want gravity to win.
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    That means her force must be smaller
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    than the gravitational force.
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    Look, even though we did
    simplify it a little bit,
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    I mean, I'm not really sure
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    that her dumbbell was moving
    at a constant velocity,
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    but once we simplified a little
    bit, we were able to analyze
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    what happened to the force
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    that she was putting on the dumbbell.
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    It went on decreasing as
    the dumbbell moved upwards.
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    Isn't that incredible
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    how we used Newton's second law do that?
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    Amazing, isn't it?
Title:
Newton's second law | Physics | Khan Academy
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Video Language:
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Duration:
11:23

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