Newton's Laws of Motion
Weight and other Forces
All About Friction
Applications of Newton's Laws of Motion
1D and 2D Kinematics Review
100

This Law of Motion states that an object at rest or at constant speed (linear) remain at rest or constant speed (linear) unless acted upon by an unbalanced force. 

What is Newton's First Law of Motion?

100

The weight of an object is also called... and is measured in these units.

What is the gravitational force/force of gravity? What is Newtons?

100

Friction is the force caused by... and affects motion by...

What is "rubbing of two materials" and "opposes motion/slows things down"?

100

Having no net force and no acceleration means this about the forces on an object.

What is "opposite forces balance each other out"?

100

These are the five kinematic variables.

What is vi, vf, a, d, and t?

200

This term refers to an object's resistance to a change in motion. based SOLELY on an object's mass.

What is inertia?

200
This force is caused by another object and must explicitly be written in problems in order to include it in a free body diagram. 

What is the applied force?

200

This is the formula to (typically) calculate the frictional force.

What is "Ff=µ FN"?

200

If an object's scale reading is greater than the weight of the object, the object's acceleration and net force is in this direction. 

What is "to the right"?

200

The component formulas use these two trigonometric functions for vectors at an angle. 

What is sine and cosine?

300

This Law of Motion refers to two forces which are equal in magnitude but opposite in direction upon contact of two objects.

What is Newton's Third Law of Motion?

300

This force caused by any surface which provides support.

What is the normal force?

300

μ is...

What is "the coefficient of Friction"?

300

A 5000-kilogram truck drops 15 kilograms of cargo that was on it when it speeds up. The inertia of the truck-cargo system will... (increase, decrease, remain the same)

What is "inertia decreases"?

300

The horizontal acceleration is ... so the horizontal velocity (increases, decreases, or remains the same)

What is "0 m/s2"? What is "remains the same"?

400

Newton's Second Law of Motion states...

What is "a net force makes a mass accelerate"?

400

This relationship is true on level, horizontal surfaces.

What is "Fg = FN"?

400

This is the difference between static and kinetic friction.

What is "static means at rest and kinetic means moving"?

400

A golden retriever and a chihuahua bump into each other at a dog park. Compared to the magnitude of the force of the golden retriever on the chihuahua, the magnitude of the force of the chihuahua on the golden retriever is... (greater, less than, the same)

What is "the same"?

400

The vertical acceleration is ... so the vertical velocity (increases, decreases, or remains the same) in the downwards direction.

What is "9.81 m/s2"? What is "increases"?

500

These are the two ways to determine net force.

What is "the sum/difference of forces OR a=Fnet/m"?

500

This force is the only force split into components for inclined planes.

What is "Fg, the gravitational force/weight"?

500

An object moving at constant speed experiences an applied force of 33 newtons. Determine the amount of frictional force acting on the object. 

What is "33 newtons"?

500

A golden retriever and a chihuahua bump into each other at a dog park. Compared to the magnitude of the acceleration of the chihuahua, the magnitude of the acceleration of the golden retriever is... (greater, less than, the same)

What is "less than"?

500

A 10-kilogram block starts from rest and accelerates at a rate of 1.1 meters per second squared. How long did it take the block to travel 7 meters? 

What is "3.57 seconds"?