This MCQ module is based on: Second Law Momentum
Second Law Momentum
This assessment will be based on: Second Law Momentum
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Second Law Momentum
4.5 Newton's Second Law of Motion
The first law refers to the simple case when the net external force on a body is zero. The second law of motion refers to the general situation when there is a net external force acting on the body. It relates the net external force to the acceleration of the body.
Momentum
Momentum of a body is defined as the product of its mass and velocity:
Momentum is a vector quantity having the same direction as velocity. Its SI unit is kg·m/s. Some everyday observations show why momentum (not just speed or mass alone) is the important quantity:
- A light object (small mass) moving fast can have the same momentum as a heavy object moving slowly. A bullet (small m, huge v) can have momentum comparable to a large rolling stone.
- The greater the momentum, the greater the force needed to stop the body in a given time.
- The greater the time over which the change of momentum occurs, the smaller the average force required (this is why air bags work).
Statement of Newton's Second Law
If mass m is constant (which is true for most everyday situations):
This gives the famous form:
- Vector law: F and a are vectors, in the same direction. Equivalent to three scalar equations: Fx = max, Fy = may, Fz = maz.
- Local relation: F at time t produces a at time t (instantaneous, not delayed).
- Defines force quantitatively: 1 newton (N) = the force that produces an acceleration of 1 m/s² on a mass of 1 kg.
- Reduces to first law: if F = 0, then a = 0, so v is constant (uniform motion or rest).
4.6 Impulse
We sometimes encounter examples where a large force acts for a very short time, producing a finite change of momentum. For example, when a ball hits a wall and bounces back, the force on the ball acts only during the brief contact (~0.01 s), but it changes the ball's momentum significantly.
The product of force and time is called impulse:
From Newton's Second Law: \(F = \Delta p / \Delta t\), so:
🎯 Interactive: Force, Mass & Acceleration
Apply a force on a block. Observe how acceleration depends on mass.
Acceleration a = F/m = 2.00 m/s²
After 5 seconds: velocity = 10.0 m/s | distance = 25.0 m
Worked Examples
Worked Example 1 (NCERT Example 4.3): Stopping a Ball
A bullet of mass 0.04 kg moving with a speed of 90 m/s enters a heavy wooden block and is stopped after a distance of 60 cm. What is the average resistive force exerted by the block on the bullet?
Using \(v^2 = u^2 + 2as\): \[0 = 90^2 + 2 \times a \times 0.60\] \[a = -\frac{8100}{1.2} = -6750 \text{ m/s}^2\]
\[F = ma = 0.04 \times (-6750) = \boxed{-270 \text{ N}}\] The negative sign indicates the force is opposite to the bullet's direction (resistive). Magnitude = 270 N.
Worked Example 2: Cricket Ball - Impulse Calculation
A cricket ball of mass 150 g moving at 15 m/s east is struck by a bat such that it returns at 25 m/s west. The contact time is 0.01 s. Find: (a) impulse, (b) average force on the ball.
(a) Impulse = change in momentum: \[J = m(v_f - v_i) = 0.15 \times (-25 - 15) = 0.15 \times (-40) = \boxed{-6 \text{ kg·m/s}}\] The negative sign means impulse is directed west (opposite to original motion).
(b) Average force: \[F_{avg} = \frac{J}{\Delta t} = \frac{-6}{0.01} = \boxed{-600 \text{ N}}\] Magnitude 600 N, directed west — explains why it stings the bat!
Worked Example 3 (NCERT Example 4.5): Bowling Strike
A man of mass 70 kg stands on a weighing scale in a lift which is moving (a) upward with uniform speed of 10 m/s, (b) downward with uniform acceleration of 5 m/s², (c) upward with uniform acceleration of 5 m/s². What would the scale read in each case? Take g = 10 m/s².
(a) Uniform speed (a = 0): N − mg = 0 ⇒ \(N = mg = 70 \times 10 = \boxed{700 \text{ N}}\)
The reading is the same as when stationary.
(b) Downward acceleration (a = 5 m/s² down): mg − N = ma ⇒ N = m(g − a) = 70 × (10 − 5) = \(\boxed{350 \text{ N}}\)
The man feels lighter (apparent weight reduced).
(c) Upward acceleration (a = 5 m/s² up): N − mg = ma ⇒ N = m(g + a) = 70 × (10 + 5) = \(\boxed{1050 \text{ N}}\)
The man feels heavier (this is what happens at lift start-up going up, or stopping going down).
Worked Example 4: Air Bag Physics
A car of mass 1000 kg moving at 20 m/s crashes into a wall. The crumple zone increases the stopping time from 0.01 s (no airbag, instant stop) to 0.5 s (with airbag). Compare the average forces in each case.
Without airbag (Δt = 0.01 s): \[F_1 = \frac{\Delta p}{\Delta t} = \frac{20000}{0.01} = \boxed{2 \times 10^6 \text{ N}}\]
With airbag (Δt = 0.5 s): \[F_2 = \frac{20000}{0.5} = \boxed{4 \times 10^4 \text{ N}}\]
Force ratio: F_1/F_2 = 50. The airbag reduces force by 50× by extending stopping time. This is why airbags save lives — same Δp, but smaller F because larger Δt.
4.7 Conservation of Momentum
Newton's Second Law allows us to derive an extremely powerful principle. If the net external force on a system is zero, then \(d\vec{p}/dt = 0\), which means \(\vec{p}\) = constant. This is the law of conservation of momentum.
Application: Recoil of a Gun
When a gun fires a bullet, the gun recoils backward. Why? Initially the gun + bullet system has zero momentum (at rest). Fired forward, the bullet gets momentum +mv. By conservation, the gun must get equal and opposite momentum:
Since M >> m, the gun's recoil velocity is small but non-zero.
Setup: Drop a raw egg from a height of 1 m onto: (i) a stone slab, (ii) a thick foam pad, (iii) a cushion of crumpled newspapers.
Observation:
(i) On the stone — egg breaks instantly.
(ii) On the foam — egg survives.
(iii) On the newspapers — egg survives.
Why? Same change in momentum in all cases (Δp = mv where v ≈ 4.4 m/s after falling 1 m). Stone stops the egg in ~0.001 s → huge force. Foam/papers stop the egg in ~0.05 s → small force. Force = Δp/Δt; larger Δt = smaller F = no breakage.
This is the same physics as: airbags, helmets, packaging foam, sand pits in long-jump landings, gymnastics mats.
🎯 Competency-Based Questions
Q1. A force of 20 N acts on a 4 kg body. Find its acceleration. L3 Apply
Q2. A cricket player while catching a ball lowers his hands. Why? L4 Analyse
Q3. A 10-gram bullet is fired from a 5-kg gun with velocity 400 m/s. Calculate the recoil velocity of the gun. L3 Apply
Q4. A boy of mass 50 kg jumps off a stationary boat of mass 200 kg with horizontal velocity 4 m/s. Find the velocity of the boat. L4 Analyse
\[V_{boat} = -\frac{50 \times 4}{200} = \boxed{-1 \text{ m/s}}\] The boat moves at 1 m/s in the OPPOSITE direction to the boy. (This is why jumping off a small boat is risky!)
Q5. HOT: Two ice skaters of masses 60 kg and 40 kg stand at rest, holding a long pole between them. They push apart along the pole. The 60-kg skater is observed to move at 2 m/s. Find: (a) velocity of the 40-kg skater, (b) which had a larger impulse from the pole? L6 Create
(b) Impulse on each = change in momentum.
Impulse on 60-kg = 60 × 2 = 120 kg·m/s.
Impulse on 40-kg = 40 × 3 = 120 kg·m/s.
Same magnitude! By Newton's Third Law (preview), the forces are equal and opposite, applied for the same duration → equal impulses.
Insight: Lighter skater accelerates more, but both experience equal force/impulse.
🧠 Assertion–Reason Questions
Choose: (A) Both true, R explains A. (B) Both true, R doesn't explain A. (C) A true, R false. (D) A false, R true.
A: An athlete bends his knees while landing from a jump.
R: Bending the knees increases stopping time, reducing the force on the legs.
A: A heavy truck and a small car moving with the same momentum experience the same force when stopped in the same time.
R: Force = Δp/Δt depends only on change in momentum and time, not on mass directly.
A: Conservation of momentum is a consequence of Newton's Second Law for an isolated system.
R: If F_ext = 0, then dp/dt = 0, so p = constant.