Work Force and Motion

Quiz
•
Science
•
8th Grade
•
Hard
+3
Standards-aligned
Lisa Thompson
FREE Resource
25 questions
Show all answers
1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Work occurs whenever something is moved and an object is put into motion. The motion of an object is described with three things: position, direction and speed. Forces come into play with work because they push and pull objects. All forces have size and direction. Some, like the pull of gravity toward a black hole, are immense, while others, like the push of an ant on a breadcrumb, are very small. Work is possible because all objects have mechanical energy, including potential (energy based on position) and kinetic (energy of motion) energy. Mechanical energy is transferred from one object to another by pushing or pulling it. How fast these objects move depends on the position they began in and how much force was applied to them. Which of the following is an example of a situation where work occurs?
a glass of water sitting on the counter
a leaf resting on a rock
a student sitting at a desk
a baseball soaring through the air
Tags
NGSS.MS-PS3-1
NGSS.MS-PS3-5
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Friction is a force that works against motion between two surfaces that are touching. Sometimes this is because two surfaces are rough and don't slide easily. If a surface isn’t smooth, there’s sliding friction, which is influenced by the mass of the moving object and the smoothness of the surface it’s moving on. Rolling friction is usually less than sliding friction, which is why it's easier to move heavy furniture on a hand truck. Rolling friction happens when we use wheels. Fluid friction makes it difficult to move through liquids like water. It's also the friction caused by air on the outside of a moving vehicle. You can feel fluid friction on your face when you run against the wind. Which of the following best describes how friction affects motion?
Friction makes motion between two touching surfaces much easier.
Sliding friction makes running on a windy day much harder on your body.
Rolling friction makes moving through liquids feel like very hard work.
Friction makes motion between two touching surfaces more difficult.
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Sir Isaac Newton's laws govern force and motion. The First Law of Motion says that an object at rest stays at rest unless acted upon by an outside force. In addition, an object in motion remains in motion at a constant speed, in a straight line, unless acted upon by an outside force. Newton's Second Law of Motion says that the acceleration of an object depends on the object's mass and the amount of force applied. The greater the force, the more it will change the object's motion. Newton's Third Law of Motion says that whenever you exert a force on an object, that object exerts an equal and opposite force on you. Or, for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. For example, when you jump off the ground, there is a downward push of your legs into the ground as well as the upward push of your body into the air. Which of these provides the best evidence for Newton’s First Law of Motion?
While sitting in a chair, you exert force on the chair, and the chair exerts the same amount of force back on you.
A basketball sitting on the basketball court doesn’t move until something pushes it.
You push a full shopping cart and an empty shopping cart. The empty shopping cart goes much faster than the full one.
You push your little brother on the swings, and he goes higher the harder you push him.
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Newton's First Law of Motion states that an object in motion tends to stay in motion unless it
starts to decelerate.
runs out of kinetic energy.
is acted upon by another force.
approaches the speed of light.
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
What is this?
"This airplane is traveling at 500 mph, West"
Speed
Velocity
Acceleration
Tags
NGSS.MS-PS3-1
6.
MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION
1 min • 5 pts
Which physical quantities appear in the formula for work. Choose more than one
force
time
distance
speed
Tags
NGSS.MS-PS3-5
7.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Velocity is the speed at which an object moves in a specific direction. It's measured in meters per second, minute or hour in a particular direction—like miles per hour going north, kilometers per minute west or meters per second up. Velocity tells us both the speed and direction we are traveling. Acceleration is a change in velocity. It's measured by subtracting the object's starting velocity from the final velocity, divided by the time this change in velocity took. We usually think of acceleration as speeding up, but it can also mean slowing down. We call this negative acceleration or deceleration. If a car was driving 45 miles per hour northeast, and is now driving 30 miles per hour north,
the car’s velocity decelerated.
the car’s velocity accelerated.
the car’s velocity remained unchanged.
the car’s acceleration is 30 miles per hour.
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