Lecture Atlas

//04.prep

EGD102 · week 4

Workshop prep

Twenty minutes or less.

Week 4 — Forces and Newton's Laws. Pick a mode. Start a timer. That's it.

Pick a mode

The shortest path to walking in prepared.

Timer

5:00

//content

5-minute version

Three workflows. One sentence each.

  • Identify forces — list every push and pull on the body; tag each as contact / long-range.
  • Draw the FBD — body as a dot, every force as a labelled arrow, pick your axes.
  • Apply Newton’s 2nd law per axis, , solve.

Open the cheatsheet quiz, do 3 easy questions, close it. You’re prepped.

20-minute prep plan

TimeAction
0–5 minSkim the cheatsheet — the catalogue-of-forces table and the FBD recipe.
5–10 minDo one worked example longhand: the boat (Example 2) — it has both axes and all the trickiest sign work.
10–15 minTake the cheatsheet quiz. Don’t worry about the score.
15–20 minRead the matching “common mistakes” + apparent-weight worked example in the in-depth note.

What to revise first

Most students slip on three specific things in this week:

  1. Drawing forces the body exerts instead of forces on the body. The FBD shows what acts on the dot, nothing else.
  2. Confusing 3rd-law pairs with balanced forces. Gravity (Earth on book) and normal (table on book) act on the same body — they balance because of , not because they’re a 3rd-law pair.
  3. Static friction set to its max value unconditionally. It only equals at the verge of slipping. Otherwise it adjusts to cancel the push.

Key formulas

Likely workshop tasks

Task typeWhat the setup usually looks like
Find a forceYou’re given mass and acceleration. Apply . (Example: train, Exercise 1 racing car.)
Find an accelerationYou’re given forces and mass. Apply . (Example: friction-overcome problems.)
Two-axis equilibrium + dynamicsOne axis balances (gives you or ), the other has the acceleration. (Example: the boat.)
Spring equilibriumUse for “mass on a spring at rest.” (Example: Exercise 4 fish scale.)
Apparent weight in elevatorSame as the boat — with as the unknown. (Example: Exercise 2.)
Static vs kinetic frictionCheck whether the applied force exceeds before assuming sliding. (Example: Exercise 5.)

Mistakes to avoid

  • Forces drawn as scalars rather than vectors.
  • Forces drawn that the body exerts rather than that act on it.
  • Missing weight or normal on the FBD.
  • Confusing balanced pairs with 3rd-law pairs.
  • Using when the block hasn’t broken loose yet.
  • Forgetting the unit conversion () before .
  • Skipping the Assess step — is the sign right, are the units right, is the magnitude believable?

Mini self-test

Try these without notes. Five minutes total.

  1. A racing car starts from rest and travels in at constant acceleration. Find the net force on it.
  2. A fish hangs from a spring scale with . How far does the spring stretch?
  3. A block on a horizontal surface has and . A horizontal force is applied. Find the block’s acceleration.

Answers:

QuestionWorkingAnswer
1;
2Equilibrium:
3Max static , so it slides. Kinetic .

Done checklist

  • Read the catalogue-of-forces table on the cheatsheet.
  • One worked example from the lecture summary (suggested: the boat) copied out longhand.
  • Cheatsheet quiz attempted.
  • Mini self-test attempted.
  • Glanced at “Common mistakes” once more.

That’s it. Close the laptop.

Source files used

  • EGD102-Physics/Lecture4_CTP1.pdf
  • EGD102-Physics/EGD102 - Lecture4 - Notes.pdf
  • EGD102-Physics/Tutorial 4.pdf