1 / 9

Physics 114 – Lecture 28

Physics 114 – Lecture 28. §9.3 Applications to Muscles and Joints Study Examples 9.8 and 9.9. Physics 114 – Lecture 28. Physics 114 – Lecture 28. Physics 114 – Lecture 28. §9.4 Stability and Balance Three types of equilibrium: Stable equilibrium:

morna
Download Presentation

Physics 114 – Lecture 28

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Physics 114 – Lecture 28 §9.3 Applications to Muscles and Joints Study Examples 9.8 and 9.9 L28_s1,9

  2. Physics 114 – Lecture 28 L28_s2,9

  3. Physics 114 – Lecture 28 L28_s3,9

  4. Physics 114 – Lecture 28 • §9.4 Stability and Balance • Three types of equilibrium: • Stable equilibrium: • When disturbed the ball will return to its equilibrium position • Neutral equilibrium: • When disturbed the ball will remain in its new equilibrium position • Unstable equilibrium: • The ball will not return to its equilibrium position • Study Examples 9.8 and 9.9 L28_s4,9

  5. Physics 114 – Lecture 28 • §9.5 Elasticity: Stress and Strain • Stretching of a body, e.g., a spring, rod, etc.: • Force exerted on spring, Fon spring = k Δx • BUT force exerted by spring, • Fby spring = - k Δx • This is known as Hooke’s Law • k is a constant for a given object and is always chosen to be > 0 • Note that if F > 0, then Δx > 0 and that if F < 0, then Δx < 0, the former case being an extension, the latter a compression • Hooke’s Law holds provided that the body is not stretched beyond its elastic limit F Δx L28_s5,9

  6. Physics 114 – Lecture 28 • Young’s Modulus • Young’s Modulus, E, for a material is defined as: • E = Stress/Strain • where stress = F/A = force per unit area • and strain = Δx/x L28_s6,9

  7. Physics 114 – Lecture 28 • Chapter 10Fluids • §10.1 Phases of Matter • For a sample of each of the following: • Solids – Fixed volume, shape and mass, e.g., copper, wood, ice, … • Liquids - Fixed volume and mass, e.g., water, alcohol, … • Gas – Fixed mass, e.g., hydrogen, oxygen, … • Plasma L28-7,9

  8. Physics 114 – Lecture 28 • §10.2 Density and Specific Gravity • Density, • Units of density: kg/m3 • Specific gravity, L28-8,9

  9. Physics 114 – Lecture 28 • §10.3 Pressure in Fluids • Pressure, P, is defined as, • Units: N/m2 = Pa (Pascals) • For a depth, h, below a surface of liquid of density, ρ, the excess pressure, is • P = ρgh • Experimental observation → Pressure in a fluid acts equally in all directions L28-9,9

More Related