This MCQ module is based on: Inertia First Law
Inertia First Law
This assessment will be based on: Inertia First Law
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Inertia First Law
4.1 Introduction
In the preceding Chapter, our concern was to describe the motion of a particle in space quantitatively. We saw that uniform motion needs the concept of velocity alone whereas non-uniform motion requires the concept of acceleration in addition. So far, we have described the motion. But what governs motion? What makes objects start, stop, or change direction? These are the questions Newton answered with his three laws of motion.
Let us first guess the answer based on our common experience. To move a football at rest, someone must kick it. To draw a sled along the ground, someone has to pull. To move a boat, someone has to row, or use an engine. Aristotle thought that an external force was required to maintain motion. As we shall see, this is a fallacy.
4.2 Aristotle's Fallacy
The Greek thinker Aristotle held the view that an external force is required to keep a body in motion. According to Aristotle, the natural state of a body is rest; if it moves, it must be because some force is constantly being applied. The flaw in this reasoning is that it fails to account for the role of opposing forces (like friction).
If we slide a book on a table, it eventually stops. Aristotle would say it's because we removed the force. The truth (Galileo's insight): the book stops because of friction. In an idealized frictionless world, the book would slide forever once started — no force needed.
4.3 The Law of Inertia
Galileo Galilei, through his famous inclined-plane experiments, established the law of inertia:
4.4 Newton's First Law of Motion
Sir Isaac Newton (1642–1727) built on Galileo's work and formulated three laws of motion. The first law states:
This is essentially Galileo's law of inertia. It defines what a force is by what it does: a force is something that changes an object's state of motion.
Inertial Frames of Reference
Newton's first law is valid only in special inertial frames — those that are not accelerating. In an accelerating bus, a stationary ball appears to roll on its own (without force) — but this is because the FRAME is accelerating, not the ball.
Mass — The Measure of Inertia
The greater the mass of a body, the greater is its inertia. A truck has more inertia than a car — it's harder to start moving, harder to stop, and harder to turn. Mass is the quantitative measure of inertia.
🎯 Interactive: Inertia & Friction
A block sits on a surface. Apply a force, then release. Adjust friction.
Try: Set μ = 0 (frictionless) → any F gives motion. Set F = 0 with high μ → block stays at rest (static friction).
Setup: Place a card on top of a glass. Place a coin on the card.
Action: Flick the card horizontally (a quick finger snap).
Observation: The card flies off, the coin drops straight down into the glass.
Why? The coin's inertia keeps it (briefly) in place horizontally. The friction between coin and card is much smaller than the force needed to suddenly accelerate the coin sideways. So the coin barely moves while the card slides out beneath it. Then gravity pulls the coin down into the glass.
This is a direct demonstration of Newton's First Law: "objects at rest stay at rest unless acted on by a sufficient force."
Worked Example 1: Astronaut in Space
An astronaut accidentally gets separated from his small spaceship in deep space. Sun is about 500 million km away. What is the acceleration of the astronaut at the instant after he is out of the spaceship? (Assume only Sun's gravity matters; gravity from spaceship is negligible.)
\[a = \frac{GM_{sun}}{r^2} = \frac{6.67 \times 10^{-11} \times 2 \times 10^{30}}{(5 \times 10^{11})^2}\] \[a \approx \boxed{5.3 \times 10^{-4} \text{ m/s}^2}\] This is small but non-zero. The astronaut would slowly accelerate toward the Sun. Newton's First Law: the absence of force — not the absence of contact with anything — defines uniform motion.
Worked Example 2: Truck vs. Car Collision
Why is it harder to stop a heavy truck than a small car moving at the same speed? Explain using Newton's First Law.
🎯 Competency-Based Questions
Q1. A book lies still on a table. What can you conclude about the net force on it?L2 Understand
Q2. When a horse pulls a cart, the cart pulls the horse back equally (Newton's 3rd law, preview). Yet the cart moves forward. Explain. L5 Evaluate
Q3. A child is sitting in a moving train. The train suddenly stops, and the child is thrown forward. Why? L3 Apply
Q4. Identify each as inertia of (a) rest, (b) motion, (c) direction:
(i) Dust flies off when carpet is beaten;
(ii) Passengers lurch sideways when a bus turns sharply;
(iii) An athlete takes a run-up before jumping. L4 Analyse
(i) Inertia of rest — dust at rest stays at rest while carpet moves.
(ii) Inertia of direction — body wants to keep moving in straight line; bus turns; relative motion sideways.
(iii) Inertia of motion — athlete acquires motion via run-up, then leverages it during jump.
Q5. HOT: Design an experiment using only a smooth horizontal track, a ball, and a stopwatch to test whether Newton's First Law is approximately valid. L6 Create
- Roll the ball along the smoothest possible track.
- Mark equal intervals along the track.
- Use stopwatch to time the ball passing each interval.
- If the times are nearly equal (constant velocity), Newton's First Law is supported (no net force = uniform motion).
- The smaller the friction, the closer the times match → idealized "frictionless" inertial motion.
🧠 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: A body in space, far from all other bodies, will remain at rest forever.
R: Newton's First Law states that uniform motion (including rest) requires no force.
A: Mass is a measure of inertia.
R: A heavier object requires more force to accelerate at the same rate as a lighter one.
A: Aristotle's view that "force is needed to maintain motion" is correct in everyday life.
R: Friction always opposes motion, so on Earth, force is needed to overcome friction.