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3rd QUARTER-WEEK 8

PRAYER
Lord of light and wisdom, grant us
bright intellect, a sound judgment
and retentive memory. Help us to
study patiently, orderly and
diligently to develop our gifts and
make use of them according to your
will. Be with me God throughout the
day. Amen
❑ He is an English
renowned scientist that
wanted to understand
the world better.

❑ In the 1660s, English physicist


and mathematician Isaac Newton
began a series of experiments
with sunlight and prisms. He
demonstrated that clear white
light was composed of seven
visible colors.
❑ In 1687, he published this book which
contains the summation of his theories
on the laws of motion and universal
gravitation, which now bear his name.

❑ The quote "all matter attracts all other


matter with a force proportional to the
product of their masses and inversely
proportional to the square of the
distance between them" sums up his
theory and has stood the test of time.
❑ The Philosophie Naturalis Principia
Mathematica outlined the
understanding of Laws of Motion.

❑ These 3 Laws of Motion are still in


use today, and can help us
understand the relationship
between the body and the forces
acting on it.
1ST LAW OF MOTION
❑ This Law tells us that things like
to keep doing what they're
already doing. If something is
sitting still, it will stay still
unless something pushes or
pulls on it.
1ST LAW OF MOTION
❑ If something is already moving, it
will keep moving in the same way
unless something slows it down,
speeds it up, or changes its
direction.
❑ The "external force" is what can
change the motion of an object. This
law helps us understand how objects
behave when no one is pushing or
pulling on them.
2ND LAW OF MOTION

❑ This Law states that the


force acting on an object is
equal to the mass of that
object times its
acceleration.
❑ F=ma
2ND LAW OF MOTION
❑ Newton's second law tells us that the
more force you apply to an object, the
more it will accelerate. But if the
object is really heavy (has more
mass), it won't accelerate as much for
the same force.

❑ It helps us understand how the motion


of an object is influenced by the forces
acting on it and its mass.
3RD LAW OF MOTION
❑ The Third Law is saying that
whenever you do something (an
action), there's always a reaction
that's equal in size but opposite in
direction.
❑ If you push something forward, that
something will push you backward
with the same amount of force. If you
kick a ball, the ball will kick you back,
but since you're much heavier, you
won't move as much.
3RD LAW OF MOTION

❑ This law helps explain why things


move. Every motion is the result
of some force, and Newton's third
law reminds us that forces
always come in pairs - you can't
push something without it
pushing back!

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