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Physics: Weight Vs. Mass 23 Views
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Description:
Check out this weighty video on weight versus mass.
Transcript
- 00:02
wait V mass why go on a diet when you could go to the moon okay ladies and
- 00:33
gentlemen we're here today to talk about a new revolutionary diet plan that is [People working out]
- 00:36
sweeping the nation want to take some pressure off of those aching joints well
- 00:40
this new plan is the answer you've been looking for you can eat whatever you
- 00:44
want and there's no exercise required all you have to do is go to the moon now
Full Transcript
- 00:49
you might be asking yourself why do we weigh less on the moon while the answer [Astronaut floating on space station]
- 00:53
gravity the moon is less massive than the earth so the pull of gravity is
- 00:57
weaker but our mass hasn't changed a bit we're still made up of the same amount
- 01:02
of stuff the difference between weight and mass can be a little confusing so
- 01:06
even though weight versus mass isn't the usual topic of a weight loss infomercial [Man wheeling a whiteboard]
- 01:11
now let's talk about it anyway in day-to-day life we think of mass and
- 01:15
weight interchangeably if you go to the doctor's office they don't ask you how [Woman appears in doctors office for weight check]
- 01:19
much mass you contain no they put you on a scale and you get your weight end of
- 01:23
story but weight and mass are very different
- 01:25
things biggest difference while weight depends on gravity mass does not mass is
- 01:31
measured in units of pounds or kilograms weight will call you the folks in charge
- 01:35
of SI units weight is measured in Newtons but good luck finding a scale [Man stood on a scale]
- 01:40
that'll tell you your weight in Newton no we'll take a much closer look at the
- 01:45
universal law of gravitation some other time but let's just be clear on the
- 01:48
basics the force of gravity is dependent on two things the masses of the objects
- 01:53
attracted by gravity and the distance between them increase the masses and you
- 01:59
increase the attraction of gravity on the other hand if you increase the
- 02:04
distance between the objects you'll decrease gravity's pulled between the
- 02:09
objects got it so while absence may make the heart grow [Planets collide]
- 02:12
fonder distance will make gravity's effect weaker gravity is also why
- 02:18
astronauts float around in the Space Station or lack of gravity it's not the [Astronauts floating]
- 02:22
force of gravity isn't acting on the astronauts in fact they're in freefall
- 02:25
the whole space station is in freefall but its horizontal velocity is so fast [Spacestation orbiting earth]
- 02:31
that as the earth pulls it toward the planets center the space station is able
- 02:35
to use that downward pull to maintain its horizontal motion and it needs a
- 02:41
whole lot of velocity to maintain its orbit the space station is traveling at
- 02:45
about 17,000 miles an hour which means it travels all the way around the earth
- 02:49
about 16 times in a 24-hour span so instead of falling down to the planet's [Space station travelling around Earth]
- 02:54
surface it's falling around the planet well the space station is only about 250
- 03:00
kilometers off the ground if that distance gravity hasn't changed all that [Man performing star jumps]
- 03:03
much but the astronauts are weightless because they're falling at the same
- 03:07
speed as the whole space station think of it like this have you ever ridden a [People sitting on a rollercoaster]
- 03:12
roller coaster well when you're at the top of the first big hill everything
- 03:16
feels normal except for maybe your bladder but as you start to go down that
- 03:21
hill it feels like you're floating you feel yourself pushing up against the [Rollercoaster pushes downwards]
- 03:25
harness and you feel like you're coming off of your
- 03:29
well the rollercoaster car and the seat you're sitting on is falling at the same
- 03:33
rate you are remember normal force occurs when an object's weight like that
- 03:38
of your toughest deforms a solid surface like a roller coaster seat but if that
- 03:43
roller coaster seat is also in freefall then you're not going to be deforming [Rollercoaster begins freefall]
- 03:48
its surface and without feeling that pushback from the seat it feels like
- 03:51
you're floating so the space station is in freefall and everything in the space
- 03:56
station is also in freefall which means that there's no normal force to [People working out in class]
- 04:01
counteract gravity everything's moving the same speed which allows everything
- 04:04
to float or here's another way to think about it
- 04:08
imagine you go skydiving everything is great [Plane flying]
- 04:12
you jump out of the plane fall for a while then pull the cord for your [Man jumps out of plane]
- 04:16
parachute only someone has pulled a wacky prank on you n instead of a
- 04:19
parachute a bathroom scale pops out that must bend your buddy Quentin flood a
- 04:23
prankster well as you're plummeting towards certain doom you decide you [Man with scales in midair]
- 04:27
might as well see how much you weigh so you put the scale on your feet and try
- 04:32
to see what it says but because you're not putting any force on the scale it
- 04:36
won't register any weight at all so you have a good chuckle at another fine [Person laughing in freefall]
- 04:41
joint like Clint while the space station is only 200 kilometers above the planet
- 04:45
the moon is about three hundred eighty four thousand four hundred kilometers
- 04:48
away and way further even at that distance though the gravity of Earth is [Moon orbiting Earth]
- 04:53
still strong enough to keep the moon in orbit but if you're walking on the moon
- 04:57
its gravity is what will be affecting you since you're right on its surface [Astronaut bouncing on the moon]
- 05:01
well the moon is much less massive than the earth but the moon's mass is about
- 05:06
1.2 percent of the Earth's mass which is why everything weighs way less up there
- 05:11
and there's less matter to create gravity and for just three easy payments [Astronaut with bag of cash appears]
- 05:16
of 50 million dollars you too can watch those pounds disappear like magic but
- 05:21
like I said mass doesn't depend on gravity which makes sense just because
- 05:24
gravity changes that doesn't mean that what we're made of
- 05:28
different even on the moon we're still the same humble incredibly smart and [Astronaut picks up mirror on the moon]
- 05:31
attractive people we've always been and Newton's first and second laws are all
- 05:35
about mass not weight well part of the first law is that the more mass an
- 05:40
object has the more inertia it has as well meaning it's harder to change its
- 05:47
motion and the second law says that the force equals mass times acceleration so
- 05:52
if it takes 10 Newtons to make a cat accelerate at 1 meter per second squared [Cat accelerating]
- 05:58
it would take 20 Newton's to make a cat with twice the mass accelerate at the
- 06:04
same rate now in those SI units we mentioned before the standard unit of
- 06:08
mass is the kilogram why not the gram we don't know go ask
- 06:12
some old French scientists and see what they can tell you in French there's [French scientist appears in the street]
- 06:15
actually some logic to it though a cubic centimeter of water has exactly one gram
- 06:20
of mass it's also known as a milliliter a thousand grams equals one kilogram and
- 06:27
a thousand milliliters equals one liter so there's a rhyme and a reason there [Man puts hat on]
- 06:31
somewhere of course while Pierre and jean-luc were deciding to use the
- 06:35
kilogram here in the u.s. we decided to just keep on using pounds and ounces and
- 06:40
not play soccer why because we just have to be different that's why America is
- 06:45
kind of a hipster when it comes to units of measurement both kilograms and pounds [Hipster girl appears]
- 06:48
are units of mass we know we know it sounds weird to say I have 130 pounds of
- 06:53
mass or whatever but the statement would technically be correct we know how to [Man picking up heavy barbell]
- 06:58
figure out how much something weighs at least here on earth we just pull out a
- 07:01
scale but what do we use to figure out mass well the best tool for that job is [Man appears in a kitchen]
- 07:06
a balance like a triple beam balance or you can use a balance that has two sides
- 07:11
like this double pan balance it's kind of like a sciencv seesaw and then we
- 07:16
could put something with a known mass on one side and find where it balances with [Man puts 1kg weight on side of balance and head of lettuce on the other]
- 07:20
something that has unknown mass there's a formula to calculate weight that
- 07:26
formula tells us that the force of gravity on an object equals the mass
- 07:30
times the acceleration of gravity it looks a lot like our good ol force
- 07:34
equals mass times acceleration formula because well they're pretty much this
- 07:39
we're just swapping out the generic acceleration for the specific
- 07:43
acceleration of gravity and you might also see F sub G swapped out for a W ie
- 07:48
wait don't sweat it it's the same thing so [Man standing at table with a scale]
- 07:51
yeah we measure weight using a scale the scale has Springs that are calibrated
- 07:55
specifically for Earth's gravity unless you somehow got a hold of a Martian
- 07:59
scale but nASA says we're not allowed to talk about those all right well you know [Martians jump on a scale]
- 08:03
the routine you put something on a scale and some kind of readout lets you know
- 08:07
how much the thing weighs but again all this measuring is being done in units of
- 08:11
mass what on earth or off of Earth for that matter is a Newton well a Newton is
- 08:17
a derived SI unit it's not one of the originals one of the big seven it's made
- 08:22
up of other SI units that come together to form a whole new thing [SI units collide]
- 08:26
well the Newton is made up of kilograms times meters over seconds squared
- 08:31
remember force equals mass times acceleration so a Newton which is a unit
- 08:36
to measure force is just made up of the standard units used to measure mass and
- 08:40
acceleration so say our cat Milo has a mass of 10 kilograms mostly muscle since [Milo appears from kitty house]
- 08:47
Milo is most definitely an Earthbound cat we can rely on our standard
- 08:51
acceleration of gravity to figure out his weight in Newtons 10 kilograms times
- 08:56
9.8 meters per second squared equals 98 Newtons but just for kicks let's say
- 09:01
Milo should you know maybe lose some weight well sure we can put him on that [Milo puts on head band and runs on treadmill]
- 09:06
low-calorie food and see if we can get him exercising again but it would be a
- 09:10
lot more fun to get him to the moon tada one small step for cat one giant [Milo in rocket to the moon]
- 09:18
leap for cat kind or something like that well on the moon the acceleration of [Cat walking on the moon]
- 09:23
gravity is 1.62 meters per second square which means Milo now weighs just about
- 09:28
16 Newtons if you wanted to convert that measurement to units we'd actually use
- 09:33
on our home planet while one Newton equals 0.2 to for 809 pounds of force
- 09:40
which means in terms of earth weight Milo has gone from 22 pounds all the way [Milo walking on the moon]
- 09:44
down to two point seven pounds but while the scale may tell us he
- 09:48
weighs less we can see just by looking at him that he hasn't lost any mass so [Milo bounces on the moon]
- 09:52
he's still 10 kilos in that well this difference in units can get confusing
- 09:57
which is why it's best to stick to Newtons
- 09:59
when we're talking about weight at least in the physics world but what happens if [Aliens beam up Milo]
- 10:03
aliens come along and decide they want a cat on their planet so they take poor
- 10:07
Milo across the galaxy to wherever they're from let's call it planet steve [Alien spacecraft lands on planet Steve]
- 10:12
and oddly enough on planet Steve they also use pounds when weighing something
- 10:17
so when our aliens gleep glorp here to take Milo to the alien veterinarian they [Aliens holding Milo]
- 10:22
find out that Milo weighs 53 pounds oh well don't worry about it you still
- 10:28
carry it well and let's face it you weren't the most active cat anyway well
- 10:32
assuming he didn't lose any mass on his space journey what's the force of
- 10:36
gravity on planet Steve well boy this whole send the cat to the moon thing [Man puts up lost cat poster]
- 10:40
that sure has taken a turn let's figure out the gravity here and then we can
- 10:44
figure out how to get Milo home safe and sound so we know Milo's mass is 10
- 10:49
kilograms and its weight is 53 pounds how do we find the force of gravity all
- 10:54
right well remember weight equals mass times gravity so we can rearrange this [Equations appear]
- 10:58
equation to solve for G but first we need that weight to be in the form of
- 11:02
Newtons so a little conversion is in order one
- 11:06
Newton equals point two two four eight oh nine pounds of force or to put it
- 11:09
another way there is point two two ish pounds for each Newton so if we divide
- 11:13
53 pounds by that number we find that Milo weighs about 231 Newtons [Milo's weight in Newtons appear]
- 11:18
now we have what we need to find the force of gravity 231 Newton's of force
- 11:22
equals 10 grams times G we divide each side of the
- 11:25
equation by ten kilograms to find that on planet Steve Milo has a gravitational [Milo walking around]
- 11:30
acceleration of 23 point one meters per second squared which is a whole ton of
- 11:35
gravity come on Milo let's get you home you're barely functional in Earth's
- 11:39
gravity well it's important to understand that Newton's our unit of
- 11:42
force and of weight that's because weight is a force generated by
- 11:46
gravitational attraction so when we say that we weigh 600 Newtons what we really
- 11:52
mean is that the gravity of Earth is acting on us to create a force of 600
- 11:57
Newtons after all weight has to be generated somehow since it's not an
- 12:02
inherent property of matter it's really a measure of how one object's mass [Earth appears]
- 12:06
interacts with another object in a gravitational field okay so maybe our
- 12:11
moon based weight loss plan isn't a great idea after all for it to work [Man discussing moon based weight loss plan]
- 12:14
long-term we'd have to stay on the moon forever otherwise when you come back to
- 12:17
earth all those pounds are right back where they started and who wants to live
- 12:21
on the moon not us all our friends are here plus there really no decent
- 12:25
restaurants up here [Man standing in hotel room]
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