📝

NCERT Physics Class 11 - Chapter 5: Laws of Motion - Notes

CBSEClass 11Physicsगति के नियम

Learning Objectives

  • State and apply Newton's three laws of motion
  • Understand the concept of inertia and momentum
  • Solve problems involving free body diagrams
  • Understand friction and its types
  • Apply concepts of circular motion dynamics

Key Concepts

Newton's First Law (Law of Inertia)

A body continues in its state of rest or uniform motion in a straight line unless acted upon by an external unbalanced force.

Inertia: The natural tendency of a body to resist a change in its state of rest or motion. Mass is a measure of inertia.

Types of inertia: Inertia of rest, Inertia of motion, Inertia of direction.

Newton's Second Law

The rate of change of momentum of a body is directly proportional to the applied force and takes place in the direction of the force.

F = dp/dt = d(mv)/dt

For constant mass: F = ma

Momentum: p = mv (a vector quantity, SI unit: kg m/s)

Impulse: J = FΔt = Δp (change in momentum). Impulse equals the area under force-time graph.

Newton's Third Law

For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. Action and reaction act on different bodies simultaneously.

F₁₂ = -F₂₁ (Force on body 1 by body 2 = negative of force on body 2 by body 1)

Action-reaction pairs never cancel each other as they act on different bodies.

Conservation of Linear Momentum

If no external force acts on a system, the total momentum remains constant: p_total = constant.

For two-body system: m₁u₁ + m₂u₂ = m₁v₁ + m₂v₂

Applications: recoil of gun, rocket propulsion, explosions.

Free Body Diagrams (FBD)

A diagram showing all forces acting on a single body. Steps: isolate the body, identify all forces (gravity, normal, tension, friction, applied), resolve forces along convenient axes, apply Newton's second law along each axis.

Friction

Static Friction: f_s ≤ μ_s N (self-adjusting, up to a maximum value). Opposes tendency of relative motion.

Kinetic Friction: f_k = μ_k N (constant). Acts during actual relative motion. μ_k < μ_s.

Rolling Friction: f_r = μ_r N. Much smaller than kinetic friction.

Angle of Friction: tan λ = μ_s

Angle of Repose: tan θ = μ_s (minimum angle of an inclined plane at which a body begins to slide).

On an inclined plane of angle θ: Component of gravity along plane = mg sin θ, Normal force N = mg cos θ.

Circular Motion Dynamics

Centripetal Force: F_c = mv²/r = mrω² (directed toward centre)

Banking of roads: tan θ = v²/rg (without friction)

With friction: v_max = √[rg(μ + tan θ)/(1 - μ tan θ)]

Summary

Newton's laws of motion form the foundation of classical mechanics. The first law defines inertia and equilibrium. The second law relates force to rate of change of momentum (F = ma). The third law states action-reaction pairs. Conservation of momentum applies to isolated systems. Friction is a contact force that opposes relative motion. Circular motion requires centripetal force directed toward the centre.

Important Terms

  • Inertia: Resistance to change in state of motion
  • Momentum: Product of mass and velocity (p = mv)
  • Impulse: Product of force and time interval (J = FΔt)
  • Normal Force: Perpendicular contact force from a surface
  • Tension: Force transmitted through a string or rope
  • Coefficient of Friction: Ratio of frictional force to normal force (μ = f/N)
  • Centripetal Force: Net force directed toward centre in circular motion

Quick Revision

  • F = ma = dp/dt; valid in inertial frames only
  • Impulse = FΔt = change in momentum
  • Action and reaction are equal, opposite, and act on different bodies
  • f_s ≤ μ_s N, f_k = μ_k N, μ_k < μ_s
  • Angle of repose: tan θ = μ_s
  • Centripetal force: F = mv²/r; Banking: tan θ = v²/rg
  • Conservation of momentum: m₁u₁ + m₂u₂ = m₁v₁ + m₂v₂
NCERT Physics Class 11 - Chapter 5: Laws of Motion - Notes | EduMunch