GP1 - Q1 - Week 4
GP1 - Q1 - Week 4
GP1 - Q1 - Week 4
Republic Act 8293, section 176 states that: No copyright shall subsist in any work of the
Government of the Philippines. However, prior approval of the government agency or office
wherein the work is created shall be necessary for the exploitation of such work for a profit.
Such agency or office may, among other things, impose as a condition the payment of royalties.
Borrowed materials (e.g., songs, stories, poems, pictures, photos, brand names,
trademarks, etc.) included in the activity sheets are owned by their respective copyright holders.
Every effort has been exerted to locate and seek permission to use these materials from the
respective copyright owners. The authors do not represent nor claim ownership over them.
Learning Competencies:
- Define inertial frames of reference (STEM_GP12N-Id-28)
- Identify action-reaction pairs (STEM_GP12N-Id-31)
- Draw free-body diagrams (STEM_GP12N-Id-32)
- Apply Newton’s 1st law to obtain quantitative and qualitative conclusions about the
contact and noncontact forces acting on a body in equilibrium (STEM_GP12N-Ie-33)
- Differentiate the properties of static friction and kinetic friction (STEM_GP12N-Ie-34)
Specific Objectives:
The learners shall be able to:
1. define inertial frames of reference;
2. identify action-reaction pairs;
3. draw free-body diagrams on the forces acting on the objects;
4. apply newton’s first law of motion on a body in equilibrium; and
5. give the differences between static and kinetic frictions.
Key Concepts
Sir Isaac Newton has significant contribution in the field of Physics as he combined his
idea with other scientists like Galileo, who have the most unified picture of how the
universe works. Newton formulated the three laws of motion and gravitation by which we
can be able to predict the movement of everything around us.
Inertia is the property of matter in which an object that is at rest wants to remain at
rest, and an object that is moving wants to remain moving in a straight line unless
another force acts upon it. Likewise, an inertial frame of reference is a reference frame
in which an object stays either at rest or at a constant velocity unless another force acts
upon it.
Sir Isaac Newton formulated three laws of motion: Law of Inertia, Law of Acceleration
and Law of Interaction.
When no net force acts on a body, the body either remains at rest or moves with constant
velocity in a straight line. Once a body has been set in motion, no net force is needed to
keep it moving. This is known as Newton’s First Law of Motion or Law of Inertia. A
body at rest continues to remain at rest and a body in constant velocity continues to be in
constant uniform motion, unless acted upon by an unbalanced force.
Newton’s first law tells that when a body is acted on by zero net force, it moves with
constant velocity and zero acceleration. But when the net force is not zero, the inertial
properties of a body are characterized by its mass.
Forces may act on the body and produce no motion. Thus, when two bodies interact by
direct contact of their surfaces, the interaction is being described in terms of contact
forces. One example of contact force is Friction.
Friction is a force that acts to oppose sliding motion between surfaces. When a body
rests or slides on a surface, the surface exerts a single contact force on the body, with
force components perpendicular and parallel to the surface. The perpendicular
component vector is the normal force, denoted by FN. The component vector parallel to
the surface is the friction force, denoted by Ff. If the surface is frictionless, then f is zero
but there is still a normal force. The direction of the friction force is always such as to
oppose relative motion of the two surfaces.
The kind of friction that acts when a body slides over a surface is called kinetic friction
force, fk while static friction force act when there is no relative motion. In symbols,
frictional force Ff is
Ff = µFN
where, µ is the coefficient of friction (static or kinetic) which depends on the nature of
surface and are usually less than one.
Friction depends upon the surfaces in contact. However, it is also assume that friction
does not depend on the area of the surfaces nor the speed of the relative motion of the
objects. The magnitude of the frictional force is proportional to the magnitude of the
force pushing one surface against the other.