Newton’s Laws of Motion

Class 11 Physics

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Newton’s Laws of Motion – Lecture Notes


1. Newton’s First Law (Law of Inertia)

Statement:
A body remains at rest or in uniform motion in a straight line unless acted upon by an external force.

Key Concepts:

  • Inertia: Tendency of an object to resist changes in its state of motion.
  • External force: Required to change the velocity of an object.

Examples:

  • A book remains on a table unless pushed.
  • Passengers lurch forward in a bus when brakes are applied.

Types of Inertia

Inertia is the property of a body to resist changes in its state of motion. It is classified into three main types:


1. Inertia of Rest

  • Definition: The tendency of a body to remain at rest unless acted upon by an external force.
  • Examples:
    • A book on a table stays in place until pushed.
    • Dust comes off a carpet when it is beaten.

2. Inertia of Motion

  • Definition: The tendency of a body to remain in uniform motion unless acted upon by an external force.
  • Examples:
    • A moving train continues to move even when the engine is turned off.
    • A person in a moving car jerks forward when brakes are applied suddenly.

3. Inertia of Direction

  • Definition: The tendency of a body to resist a change in its direction of motion.
  • Examples:
    • A stone tied to a string moves in a circular path; when the string breaks, it flies tangentially.
    • Passengers in a car feel pushed sideways when the car turns sharply.

Summary Table

Type of InertiaDescriptionExample
Inertia of RestBody resists change from restStationary ball remains still until kicked
Inertia of MotionBody resists change in uniform motionCar continues moving even when engine is off
Inertia of DirectionBody resists change in direction of motionRider moves tangentially when bicycle turns suddenly

2. Newton’s Second Law (Law of Acceleration)

Statement:
The rate of change of momentum of a body is directly proportional to the applied force and takes place in the direction of the force.

Mathematical Form:
F=ma

Where:

  • F= Force (N)
  • m = Mass (kg)
  • a = Acceleration (m/s²)

Units:

  • SI unit of force: Newton (N) = kg·m/s²

Applications:

  • Pushing a car vs. a bicycle: more force needed for heavier mass.
  • Rocket propulsion.

3. Newton’s Third Law (Action-Reaction Law)

Statement:
For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.

Key Concepts:

  • Forces always occur in pairs.
  • Action and reaction act on different bodies.

Examples:

  • A gun recoils when fired.
  • Walking: foot pushes ground backward, ground pushes foot forward.

Newton’s Third Law of Motion – Explanation with Diagram


1. Statement of the Law

Newton’s Third Law of Motion states:

For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.

In simpler terms:

Forces in nature always occur in pairs.
If body A exerts a force on body B, then body B exerts an equal and opposite force on body A.


2. Explanation Through Notation

This means:

  • The magnitude of both forces is the same.
  • The direction is opposite.
  • The forces act on different bodies, not canceling each other out.

3. Diagram Description

The diagram shows two bodies, A and B, in contact (like during a collision):

This mutual interaction is the essence of Newton’s third law.


4. Key Points

  • Action and reaction forces always occur in pairs.
  • They act on different objects.
  • They are equal in magnitude, opposite in direction.
  • They never cancel each other since they act on different bodies.

Examples in Daily Life

  • Walking: Your foot pushes the ground backward (action), and the ground pushes you forward (reaction).
  • Swimming: Hands push water backward; water pushes swimmer forward.
  • Recoil of gun: Bullet moves forward; gun recoils backward.

Additional Notes:

Free-body diagrams:

Used to illustrate all forces acting on a body.

Limitations of Newton’s Laws:

  • Not valid at very high speeds (near light speed) – use Einstein’s relativity.
  • Not valid at atomic scales – use quantum mechanics.

Practice Questions:

  1. A 5 kg object is accelerating at 3 m/s². What is the force applied?
  2. Why do passengers fall backward when a bus starts suddenly?
  3. A bullet is fired from a gun. Explain the motion of the bullet and the recoil of the gun.

Newton’s Second Law in Component Form:


Significance:

  1. Vector Analysis: Enables the analysis of forces and motion in each direction (x, y, z) independently.
  2. 2D/3D Problems: Essential for solving real-world physics problems involving multiple dimensions.
  3. Net Force Computation: Helps determine individual force contributions along each axis.
  4. Equilibrium Conditions: In static or dynamic equilibrium, components can be set to zero or balanced.
  5. Simulation & Engineering: Widely used in simulations, structural analysis, and mechanics.

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