We have changed our privacy policy. In addition, we use cookies on our website for various purposes. By continuing on our website, you consent to our use of cookies. You can learn about our practices by reading our privacy policy.

ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos

AP Physics 1: 1.4 Properties of Objects and Systems 264 Views


Share It!


Description:

AP Physics 1: 1.4 Properties of Objects and Systems. What is the difference between inertial and gravitational mass?

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:00

Thank you We sneak and here's your shmoop du jour

00:05

brought to you by inertia We find inertia to be

00:09

its strongest on saturday morning All right during your study

00:12

group your study buddy turns to you and says inertial

00:15

and gravitational mass both have the same value They must

00:19

be the same thing right Well in order to prevent

00:23

him from failing the next physics quiz how should you

00:26

respond and hear the potential answers that All right we'll

00:34

get started Let's talk inertia way all know what gravity

00:38

is and no we're not talking about sandra bullock movie

00:40

although it was pretty cool and it did bank has

00:42

reconsider our dream of being an astronaut You may have

00:46

heard someone say a body at rest tends to stay

00:48

at rest and a body in motion tends to stay

00:51

in motion The person who first spoke these words was

00:54

yes sir isaac newton yet the same old guy who

00:57

took an apple to the head and figured out gravity

01:00

and he didn't say it exactly like that because they

01:02

spoken is funny way back then but that's the gist

01:05

of newton's first law of motion what this means is

01:08

that if you have a bowling ball sitting on a

01:10

table that ball isn't going to just start moving on

01:12

its own force needs to be applied to it to

01:15

make it move and once it's moving force needs to

01:18

be applied to make it stop moving or to make

01:21

it change direction that force can be friction or something

01:25

that can apply a direct force to stop the motion

01:28

So if we know what inertia is We can understand

01:30

inertial mass inertial mass is a measure of an object

01:34

tendency to resist change is in motion the mohr inertial

01:38

mass an object has the more it resists change like

01:41

your aunt who still thinks it's nineteen eighty six now

01:44

gravitational mass is calculated using an object gravitational weight but

01:49

don't confuse mass and weight They're not the same thing

01:53

mass doesn't change Sandra bullock has mass no matter where

01:58

she is but wait requires gravity that's why sandra can

02:02

be weightless in space she's not being pulled down by

02:05

the earth's gravitational force or by george clooney to calculate

02:08

an object gravitational mass We need to know the objects

02:12

weight and the force of gravity So when we put

02:15

all this knowledge together we see that the correct answer

02:18

is option A inertia refers to an objects resistance to

02:22

change while the gravitational mass is the mass calculated from

02:26

an object gravitational weight option b is wrong because the

02:30

values aren't different and objects inertial mass is the same

02:34

as its gravitational mass differences just in how they're measured

02:38

see gets it wrong because mass never refers to volumes

02:41

plus uses the definition of inertial master To find gravitational

02:47

and option d is wrong because the formula used to

02:49

calculate the types of masses is the same So if

02:52

inertial mass and gravitational masters equal to each other why

02:55

do we need to know the diff Well it's Because

02:58

they let us describe mass in different ways And that

03:00

lets us think about mass in different ways Being able

03:03

to think about things in different ways is always helpful

03:06

in physics or well any other branch of science and

03:08

know our inertial mass doesn't quadruple on those saturday mornings

03:12

Just

Related Videos

AP Physics 1: 2.5 Changes and Conservation Law
445 Views

AP Physics 1: 2.5 Changes and Conservation Law. At what point(s) in this situation is energy lost in any form?

AP Physics 1: 1.4 Waves
181 Views

AP Physics 1: 1.4 Waves. Which of the following is technically true for Max as he stands at the edge of oblivion? 

AP Physics 1: 1.4 Changes and Conservation Laws
177 Views

AP Physics 1: 1.4 Changes and Conservation Laws. Find the current across R2.

AP Physics 1: 2.4 Changes and Conservation Laws
172 Views

AP Physics 1: 2.4 Changes and Conservation Laws. Which of the following circuits should the students use?

AP Physics 1: 1.5 Waves
12 Views

AP Physics 1: 1.5 Waves. What can possibly occur when the two waves reach each other?