How do Newton’s 
laws impact our 
everyday lives?
Why do objects at a
constant velocity remain 
at that velocity?
Sources: 18
Claim: The objects will only remain 
at that constant velocity if an outside 
force doesn’t act against it. And that 
is exactly why it remains at a constant 
velocity, nothing is stopping it
Evidence: Its like cruise control, 
It keeps going until an outside 
force stops it, such as the brakes. 
The brakes will stop the cruise 
control and the car too. 
Inertia: a property of matter by 
which it continues in its existing 
state of rest or uniform motion in
 a straight line, unless that state
 is changed by an external force         
Inertia is the “reason” that the
 velocity stays constant.
Personal Experience: I was riding a 
scooter at a campground when i was 
like 10 and i rode it down a steep hill
 and couldn’t stop in so once i got 
in the grass i fell off, it's kind of the 
same thing
In which direction will 
an object move if acted 
on by multiple forces?
Sources: 20
Claim: It will simply go the way 
the greater force is applied.
Evidence:            -------------> []  ←------
                         30N              15N
               It will go ----> with 15 N of force
If you are playing tug of war the only way 
you can win is but pulling more than the other side.
A push and a pull are both forces and when 
you are adding to the net force.
Mass doesn’t really relate to acceleration in
 the formula aspect but it does if you’re trying 
to find the amount of force being applied. 
 
Acceleration formula: A = Vf - Vi / Time
Personal Experience: My brother and I 
were pushing a four wheeler when it ran 
out of gas, he was on it and that is sort 
of and opposite force pushing against me 
pushing it because it is making it heavier 
and making there be more friction
How can two objects of 
different sizes exert the 
same amount of force 
on each other?
Sources: 21, 22
Claim: The smaller one must
 put more force into it because he 
has less momentum just because 
he weighs less. The bigger one has 
more weight so even with a little
 speed he gains much more force than
 a smaller person.  
The other part of the third laws is if 
you apply force to something you will 
feel the force you put in back on yourself.
Evidence: Momentum: the quantity of motion 
of a moving body, measured as a product of 
its mass and velocity
Momentum formula: P=mv 
(momentum= mass x velocity)
If a person weighs 100 kg and is going 10 m/s 
it would have to same force as a person that weighs
 1000 kg and is going 1 m/s or a person that weighs
 10kg going 100 m/s . 
The weight doesn’t really matter, only thing that 
matters is the end force, when you multiply weight
 and speed. 
If you hit something and your hand hurts it's
 because you feel the force you hit with back onto
 your hand.
Personal Experience: It's kind of like a treadmill, 
it spins which makes you have to run faster so you 
don’t fall off. You running is like your force and the 
treadmill spinning is its force and you are “pushing”
 against it by running.
I seen someone hit a wall and their knuckles start
 bleeding because they feel the force they hit the 
wall with.
