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Definitions

1. Breaking Stress

  • Definition: The maximum stress that a material can withstand before it fails or breaks.
  • Explanation: This threshold is critical in engineering, as exceeding it causes materials to fracture. Engineers use this value to ensure structures can support their intended loads safely.

2. Brittle

  • Definition: A material property where the material exhibits minimal strain before it fractures.
  • Explanation: Brittle materials, like glass or ceramic, crack rather than deform under stress. They lack the elasticity to absorb impact, making them suitable for uses where rigidity is essential.

3. Centre of Mass

  • Definition: The point in an object where all of its mass can be considered to act.
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  • Example: For a uniform, symmetrical object like a sphere, the centre of mass is at its centre. Knowing this point is essential in predicting the motion of objects under gravity.

4. Conservation of Energy

  • Definition: Energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transferred or transformed.
  • Explanation: This principle underpins all physics. For example, in a pendulum, potential energy at the highest point is converted into kinetic energy at the lowest point.

5. Conservation of Momentum

  • Definition: The total momentum of a closed system remains constant unless acted upon by external forces.
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  • Example: In a collision between two cars, the total momentum before and after the collision remains the same if no external force (like friction) interferes.

6. Couple

  • Definition: A pair of equal but opposite forces acting parallel but along different lines, creating rotation without translation.
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  • Example: Turning a steering wheel involves a couple, as your hands apply forces in opposite directions around the wheel's centre.

7. Density

  • Definition: The mass per unit volume of a material, typically in kg/m3kg/m³.
  • Formula: ρ=mV\rho = \frac{m}{V}
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  • Example: Water has a density of approximately 1000kg/m31000 kg/m³, which is why it's commonly used as a reference material.

8. Efficiency

  • Definition: The ratio of useful output energy to input energy in a system.
  • Formula: Efficiency=Useful OutputTotal Input×100%\text{Efficiency} = \frac{\text{Useful Output}}{\text{Total Input}} \times 100\%
  • Explanation: Efficiency measures how well a system converts energy. A 100% efficient machine would have no energy loss, which is ideal but practically impossible.

9. Elastic Behaviour

  • Definition: When a material returns to its original shape after the removal of a deforming force.
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  • Example: A rubber band exhibits elastic behaviour by returning to its initial shape after being stretched.

10. Elastic Collision

  • Definition: A collision where the total kinetic energy of the system is conserved.
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  • Example: In gas particles, elastic collisions mean energy is transferred between particles without any loss, allowing gases to maintain pressure.

11. Elastic Limit

  • Definition: The maximum force that can be applied to a material without causing permanent deformation.
  • Explanation: If the force exceeds the elastic limit, the material will no longer return to its original shape. Beyond this point, plastic deformation begins.

12. Elastic Strain Energy

  • Definition: The energy stored in an object when it's stretched or compressed within its elastic limit.
  • Formula: Can be calculated from the area under a force-extension graph up to the elastic limit.

13. Equilibrium

  • Definition: A state where all the forces and moments acting on an object are balanced, resulting in no acceleration.
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  • Example: For an object to remain at rest on a table, the downward gravitational force must be balanced by the upward normal force.

14. Hooke's Law

  • Definition: The extension of an elastic material is directly proportional to the applied force, up to the material's limit of proportionality.
  • Formula: F=kxF = kx, where kk is the spring constant and xx is the extension.
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  • Example: A spring stretches proportionally to the force applied, following Hooke's Law until it reaches its elastic limit.

15. Impulse

  • Definition: The change in momentum resulting from a force acting over a time interval.
  • Formula: Impulse=FΔt=Δp\text{Impulse} = F \Delta t = \Delta p
  • Explanation: Impulse is crucial in collisions, where the force over time changes an object's momentum.

16. Inelastic Collision

  • Definition: A collision where kinetic energy is not conserved, though momentum is.
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  • Example: When a car collides and deforms, some kinetic energy is lost to sound, heat, or deformation.

17. Moment

  • Definition: The turning effect of a force, equal to the force multiplied by the perpendicular distance from the pivot.
  • Formula: Moment=F×d\text{Moment} = F \times d
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  • Example: Using a spanner on a bolt, the moment created helps turn the bolt, with longer spanners providing greater moments.

18. Momentum

  • Definition: The product of an object's mass and velocity, indicating its motion quantity.
  • Formula: p=mvp = mv
  • Explanation: Momentum is conserved in a closed system, making it vital in understanding collisions.

19. Newton's First Law

  • Definition: An object will remain at rest or move at a constant velocity unless acted upon by a resultant force.
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  • Example: A stationary ball on a frictionless surface won't move until a force is applied.

20. Newton's Second Law

  • Definition: The acceleration of an object is proportional to the net force acting on it and inversely proportional to its mass.
  • Formula: F=maF = ma
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  • Example: Pushing a lighter object results in greater acceleration than pushing a heavier one with the same force.

21. Newton's Third Law

  • Definition: For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.
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  • Example: When you push against a wall, it pushes back with an equal force in the opposite direction.

22. Plastic Behaviour

  • Definition: Permanent deformation of a material after the force is removed, beyond the elastic limit.
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  • Example: Metal bending under stress exhibits plastic behaviour if it doesn't return to its original shape.

23. Principle of Moments

  • Definition: For equilibrium, the sum of clockwise moments around a pivot must equal the sum of anticlockwise moments.
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  • Example: A seesaw balances when the moments of both sides are equal.

24. Scalar

  • Definition: A quantity with only magnitude and no direction, like mass or temperature.

25. Spring Constant (kk)

  • Definition: A measure of a spring's stiffness, indicating the force required for a unit extension.
  • Explanation: Stiffer springs have higher spring constants, meaning they resist stretching more.

26. Stiffness

  • Definition: How resistant a material is to being stretched or deformed.
  • Explanation: High-stiffness materials don't deform easily, which is important in applications requiring rigidity.

27. Tensile Strain

  • Definition: The ratio of an object's extension to its original length, dimensionless.
  • Formula: Strain=ΔLL\text{Strain} = \frac{\Delta L}{L}

28. Tensile Stress

  • Definition: The force per unit area experienced by an object when subjected to stretching forces.
  • Formula: Stress=FA\text{Stress} = \frac{F}{A}
  • Unit: Pascals (PaPa)

29. Terminal Speed

  • Definition: The maximum speed of an object when resistive forces equal the driving force, resulting in zero acceleration.
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  • Example: A skydiver reaches terminal speed when air resistance balances their weight.

30. Vector

  • Definition: A quantity with both magnitude and direction, such as velocity or force.

31. Young's Modulus (EE)

  • Definition: A measure of a material's stiffness, calculated as the ratio of stress to strain.
  • Formula: E=σϵE = \frac{\sigma}{\epsilon}, where σ\sigma is stress and ϵ\epsilon is strain.
  • Unit: Pascals (PaPa)
  • Application: Used to characterise materials; higher Young's modulus means a material is less elastic.
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