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Created with Fabric.js 1.4.5 Morgan Bailey Block 2A Chapter 12 Isaac Newton was an English physicist, mathematician, astronomer, and scientist in the 1700s. He formulated the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd laws of motion. As for his personal life, he was born on December 25, 1642, and went to Cambridge University. He had a very large hatred for his mother, leaving him at a young age with his grandmother, such an amount of hatred that he wanted to burn his mothers house with his mother and step father inside. He had his own librarywith 1600-1800 volumes. He also created the term 'gravity' by noticing an apple falling from a tree. Newton's 1st law - Every object in a state of uniform motion tends to remain in that stateof motion unless an external force isapplied to it. Newton's 2nd law - The relationship between an object's mass (m) its acceleration (a) and the applied force (F) is F = ma. Acceleration and force are vectors (as indicated by their symbolsbeing displayed in parenthesis); in this law, the direction of the forcevector is the same as the directionof the acceleration vector. Newton's 3rd law - For every action, there isan equal and opposite reaction Forces Are Unbalanced There is an Acceleration The acceleration depends inversely upon the objecsmass The acceleration depends directly upon the net force Weight = ma F = mg Universal Law of Gravity:Any two bodies in the universe attract each other with a force that is directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the same of the distance between them Spring tides - A tide that occurs when the difference between high and low tide is greatest. They come twice a monthapproximately at the full and new moon. Neap tides - A tide that occurs when the difference between high and low tide is least. They come twice a month, in the first and third quarters of the moon Projectile Motion - A form of motion in which an object or particle is thrown near the earth's surface, and moves along a curved path under the action of gravity only, which is the only significance and acts downward, causing a downward acceleration. Free Fall Acceleration - falling under the sole influence of gravity Impulse - the change in momentum of a body of physical system over a time interval in classical mechanics, equal to the force applied. Elastic Collision - an encounter between two bodies in which the total kinetic energy of the two bodies collide and bounce off each other Inelastic Collision - the opposite of elastic collision, where the two objects do notbounce off each other Conservation of Momentum - total linear momentum of a closed system remains constant through time regardless of the otherpossible changes within the system.
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