ppt phy10 wk01 intro

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Physics 10 1

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Page 1: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

Physics 101

Page 2: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

Physics 10 Coverage•Kinematics•Newton’s Laws of Motion•Uniform Circular Motion and Universal Law of

Gravitation

•Textbook: Halliday, et al. Principles of Physics 10th edition (International student version)

• URL: •Users of 9th ed, in order to access 10th ed. on-

line services, pls. submit your names to your teacher

Page 3: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

•Vision :

•Mission:

• -

• -

• -

Page 4: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

Computation of Grades

•Quiz 1 PS 1•Quiz 2 PS 2•Quiz 3 PS 3•Quiz 4 PS 4 Final Exam ____

______ ____ Recitation ____

Page 5: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

Eleven (11) Weeks• Week Date Activity Week Date Activity • 1 7

• 2 8

• 3 9

• 4 10

• 5 11

• 6

Page 6: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

Week 1

•Measurements (Exact and Inexact)•Rules of Significant Figures•Rules of Rounding Off and Scientific

Notation•Conversion of Units

Page 7: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

Language of Measurements

•Physics is an experimental science. Experiments require measurements, and we generally use numbers to describe the results of measurements.

Page 8: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

1.7

International System of Units (SI)

Page 9: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

Measurement• In science, we have the seven physical

standards:

Page 10: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

Unit Prefixes

Page 11: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

The British System

•British units are now officially defined in terms of SI units, as follows:

Length: 1 inch = 2.54 cmForce: 1 pound(force) = 4.448221615260 newtons

Page 12: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

Dimensional Analysis/Unit Consistency•An equation must always be dimensionally

consistent.

• Mass = M• Length = L• Time = T

Some examples:• Density has the quantity of M / L3

• Speed has the quantity of L / T (i.e. miles per hour)

• Acceleration has the quantity of L /T2 • Force has the quantity of M L / T2

Question:

Can the left hand side of an expression A = B have different units than the right hand side?

Page 13: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

Dimensional Analysis

•Checking equations with dimensional analysis:

x f xi vit 1

2at 2

Note: • Each term must have same dimension• Two variables can not be added if dimensions are

different• Multiplying variables is always fine• Numbers (e.g. 1/2 or p) are dimensionless

Page 14: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

Check the equation for dimensional consistency:

2

2

2

)/(1mc

cv

mcmgh

Here, m is a mass, g is an acceleration, c is a velocity, h is a length

Page 15: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

•Consider the equation:

•Where m and M are masses, r is a radius andv is a velocity.

•What are the dimensions of G ?

mv2

rG

Mm

r2

Page 16: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

Conversion of Units1 inch = 2.54 cm 1 inch / 2.54 cm

= 1 1 m = 3.28 ft 1 m / 3.28 ft = 1 1 mile = 5280 ft 5280 ft / 1 mile

= 1 1 hr = 60 min = 3600 s 1 hr / 3600 s =

1

Example: Convert miles per hour to meters per second:

111hr

mi 1

hr

mi1

s

m

2

1

s

m447.0

s 3600

hr 1

ft28.3

m 1

mi

ft 5280

hr

mi 1

hr

mi1

Page 17: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

Practice Exercise1. A platinum metal with density of 21.50 g/cu. cm

has a volume of 4.49 cu. cm. What is the mass in pound mass if 1 kg = 1000 g = 2.2 pound mass?

2. During your travel, you rent a small car which consumes 6 liters of gasoline per 100 km. a. What is the MPG (mi/gal) of the car ?•B. How gal of gasoline is needed to travel 1.25mi (There are 3.8 liters per gallon; 1.6 km in 1 mi)

Page 18: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

Convert 172.9 0F to degrees Celsius.

Page 19: Ppt Phy10 Wk01 Intro

Convert 172.9 0F to degrees Celsius.

0F = x 0C + 3295

0F – 32 = x 0C95

x (0F – 32) = 0C95

0C = x (0F – 32)95

0C = x (172.9 – 32) = 78.2895

1.7