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This module is part of a book (or collection) designed to make physics concepts accessible to blind students. The collection is intended to supplement but not toreplace the textbook in an introductory course in high school or college physics.
This module introduces force and motion in a format that is accessible to blind students.
In addition to an Internet connection and a browser, you will need the following tools (as a minimum) to work through the exercises in these modules:
The minimum prerequisites for understanding the material in these modules include:
I recommend that you also study the other lessons in my extensive collection of online programming tutorials. You will find a consolidated index at www.DickBaldwin.com .
We dealt with bodies in equilibrium in earlier modules. By equilibrium, I mean that we dealtwith forces acting on bodies at rest or forces acting on bodies in uniform motion. A body in equilibrium does not accelerate as a result of the forces acting onit.
An example of a body experiencing forces while at rest
A highway bridge is an example of a body at rest being acted upon by a variety of forces.As vehicles enter and exit the bridge, those vehicles exert forces on the bridge. The impact of those forces is "felt" by all the structural members that make up the bridge.The tension and compression in the various members of the bridge change as vehicles enter and leave the bridge, but the bridge remains in the same fixedlocation. If properly designed, the bridge doesn't experience acceleration and crash into the river below as a result of those changing forces.
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