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A further look about teaching impulsive forces using a smartphone

The introductory textbooks on classical mechanics are extremely brief in addressing impulsive forces and the concept of impulse. This can be explained by the emphasis on the study of physical situations in which the applied forces are all constant or position dependent, but constant in time, which is the class of the so-called conservative forces. When the impulsive forces are referred to, they are generally illustrated by a quick blow on a ball, as in golf, tennis or baseball. The focus is still to turn the time dependent force into a constant average force, whose impulse is equivalent to the real force. This paper proposes a simple experiment that consists in applying with the fingers an impulsive force on a smartphone and record the time dependence of the force through its internal accelerometer. This technology allows obtaining the values of the speed during the applied impulsive force by iterating the data extracted of acceleration and time. Some interesting aspects neglected in books emerge from this analysis, such as the lack of symmetry of the applied impulsive force, the possibility of modeling the full interaction without appeal to the concept of average force and calculating impulse directly by impulse and linear momentum theorem. As a consequence of the experiment, it is also possible to obtain the kinetic friction coefficient between the smartphone and the horizontal surface.

Keywords:
physicfs teaching; impulsive forces; accelerometer; smartphone


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