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Steph
Mar21-03, 05:10 AM
Hey there everyone

I need to do a presentation that shows the danger of having loose objects in the car...using Newton's first law...i'm stuck for ideas, we have to make some experiment like an egg on a trolley or something...does anyone have any ideas?

Steph

Entropia
Mar21-03, 08:31 AM
Originally posted by Steph
Hey there everyone

I need to do a presentation that shows the danger of having loose objects in the car...using Newton's first law...i'm stuck for ideas, we have to make some experiment like an egg on a trolley or something...does anyone have any ideas?

Steph

Newton's first law goes as follows: An object in motion will tend to stay in motion unless disturbed by an outside force.

With that in mind, if one is traveling in a car (i.e in motion) at.. oh lets say... 13 m/s (approx. 30 mph), their body *is* traveling at that speed (as are the other loose objects in the car), and for a body with that much momentum (lets say an infant, as a "loose object" that weight 4 Kilograms... that is why they have special car seats) with the momentum of 52 Kg*m/s (mass * velocity = momentum)....

were to come to a sudden halt in.. oh lets say 0.5 seconds because some guy who just got kicked by an intense relation started rolling down from a hill, rolled into the street...

the force of impact the infant would have if it was not strapped to its car seat would be the following:

F= mass * delta velocity/ delta time ("delta" meaning, "change in")

so the force the infant would extert on a particular object (the "outside force that disturbs the body in motion".-window? and remember newton's third law: for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. i.e "the wall hits me back as hard as i hit it") if it were to fly out of its baby car seat would be... 104 Newtons.

Which can do some damage.

I dont know about an egg in a trolly...

But you can apply the principles of impulse (force * time= impulse=change in momentum over time) by throwing an egg at a wall (and watching it break) and throwing an egg (at approx the same speed) at a towel (somebody should be holding the towel) and watch it NOT break.

the "change in time" will be bigger for the egg being thrown at the towel, hence the impulse is smaller. -thus, will likely not break as opposed to having a "small" change in time, which would make the impulse bigger. (the equation explains this)

umm... if this was not helpful.... i am sure you can find allllllllll sorts of stuff on the net that can help explain this.

i just punched some stuff into google, and this might be useful, or not.

http://www.physicsclassroom.com/Class/momentum/U4L1b.html

good luck.

Njorl
Mar21-03, 08:35 AM
If the loose object is a rattlesnake the demo is pretty easy. [;)]

Njorl