Targeted Content Standards and Benchmarks
National Science Standards
Motions—Grades 9-12
- Objects change their motion only when a net force is applied. Laws of motion are used to calculate precisely the effects of forces on the motion of objects. The magnitude of the change in motion can be calculated using the relationship F = ma, which is independent of the nature of the force. Whenever one object exerts force on another, a force equal in magnitude and opposite in direction is exerted on the first object.
- Gravitation is a universal force that each mass exerts on any other mass. The strength of the gravitational attractive force between two masses is proportional to the masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.
Student Objectives
Students will be able to:
- Use general relationships among position, velocity, and acceleration for the motion of a particle along a straight line to predict where an object will stop
- Predict the motion of a projectile in a uniform gravitational field
- Determine cause-and-effect relationships among physics concepts
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