
Assume you are sitting in your airplane seat, and the airplane moves with constant
velocity v through smooth air. Your tray is pulled down and a glass filled with
juice is sitting on it. The surface of the liquid is perfectly smooth.
Are the glass and the liquid at rest?
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The state of motion (i.e. the velocity) of any object is always defined with respect to a reference frame.
| You are getting thirsty and decide to have a drink. You grab the glass, pull it towards
you, and lift it towards your lips. The state of motion of the glass changes in both
reference frames. If something pushes or pulls on an object, we say that a force is acting on the object. A force is a vector. It has magnitude and direction. If two or more forces act on an object, then the net force acting on the object is the vector sum of all the forces. |

You pull on the glass, therefore you are exerting a force on the glass. The glass is now no longer at rest in the frame of the airplane, and it is no longer moving with constant velocity in the reference frame fixed on the ground. You apply a force to the glass, and the glass changes its velocity as seen in both frames. The glass is accelerating in both frames.
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| Newton's first law, also called
the law of inertia, defines a
special class of reference frames, called inertial frames.
It states that, when viewed in an inertial reference frame, an object at rest remains at
rest and an object in motion continues in motion with constant
velocity unless it is acted on by an external net force. The frame fixed in the
airplane moving with constant velocity v and the frame fixed on the
ground in the example above are inertial frames. | |||
Are all frames inertial frames?
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Is a reference frame with its origin fixed at a point on the surface of the earth an
inertial frame?
Example:The radius of the earth is r = 6368 km. The earth rotates about its axis once every 24 hours. A point on the surface of the earth on the equator moves with speed v = 2pr/24h = 463m/s. The magnitude of its acceleration is a = v2/r = 0.034m/s2. This is very small compared to the gravitational acceleration, which is 9.8m/s2. |
In an inertial frame the state of motion of an object only changes if there is a net force acting on the object. If there is no net force acting on an object, its velocity will not change. If it is initially at rest, it will stay at rest, if it is moving with a given speed in a certain direction, it will keep on moving with the same speed in the same direction.
The merry-go-round in the video clip below is not an inertial frame. In this frame the ball does not move in a straight line with constant velocity, even though the net force on the ball is zero.
Links:
| The car and the wall | |
| The motorcyclist |
| In the motion picture "It Happened One Night" (Columbia
Pictures, 1934), Clark Gable is standing inside a stationary bus, in front
of Claudette Colbert, who is seated. The bus suddenly starts moving
forward, and Clark falls into Claudette's lap. Why did this happen?
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What is wrong with the statement "Because the car is at rest, there
are no forces acting on it."? How would you correct this
sentence?
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Link to other Web Materials:
| Lesson 1: Newton's First Law of Motion | |
| Isaac Newton resources |
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