Newton’s Laws of Motion

Why It Matters

Newton’s laws are the foundation of dynamics. They explain how forces relate to motion, why a force is needed to change velocity rather than maintain velocity, and how forces between interacting bodies occur in pairs.

Definition

Newton’s first law states that a body remains at rest or moves with constant velocity unless acted on by a non-zero resultant external force.

Newton’s second law states that the resultant force on a body equals the rate of change of momentum:

For constant mass, this becomes:

Newton’s third law states that if body A exerts a force on body B, then body B exerts an equal and opposite force on body A. These two forces act on different bodies.

Key Representations

For a body of constant mass:

In component form:

These are signed component equations after choosing positive - and -directions. In one dimension, the vector equation is often written as one signed scalar equation along the chosen positive direction.

If the resultant force is zero:

then:

The body may be at rest or moving with constant velocity.

Common Exam Points

  • Resultant force causes acceleration, not velocity.
  • A body can move at constant velocity with zero resultant force.
  • Free-body diagrams show forces acting on one chosen body only.
  • Third-law pairs act on different bodies, so they do not cancel on the same free-body diagram.
  • Weight is a force: .
  • Normal contact force is not automatically equal to weight; it depends on the acceleration and other vertical forces.