8.01x - Lect 6 - Newton's Laws

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  • čas přidán 6. 02. 2015
  • Newton's Laws
    Assignments Lecture 5, 6, 7 and 8: freepdfhosting.com/95e6843397.pdf
    Solutions Lecture 5, 6, 7 and 8: freepdfhosting.com/4984cbb7f1.pdf
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Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @KrishanKumar-hs4sg
    @KrishanKumar-hs4sg Před 2 lety +267

    just imagine how lucky those students ,sitting in front of one of the best lecturer of the decade 💫

  • @mahfujanam2789
    @mahfujanam2789 Před 8 lety +505

    Sir you dont teach physics rather you teach how to think & feel physics....

  • @sceKernelDestroy
    @sceKernelDestroy Před 6 lety +680

    6th lecture: Newton's Laws
    -------------------------------------------
    00:20 Newton's First Law and Inertial Reference Frames
    06:55 Newton's Second Law (F = ma)
    14:14 Newton's Third Law (action = -reaction)
    20:28 Various Examples of the 3rd Law, e.g. Heros engine (aeolipile)
    26:25 Consequences of Newton's Laws, e.g. strings under tension

  • @bb-gb7jv
    @bb-gb7jv Před 3 lety +60

    Seriously! My life changed after I discovered these lectures
    I now watch these videos instead of netflix and these lectures are much more interesting

  • @hmccoy99
    @hmccoy99 Před 4 lety +181

    a great scientist and lecturer with a vast command of physics

  • @peterbiggerstaff5581
    @peterbiggerstaff5581 Před 4 lety +37

    Never ever found this sort of thing interesting but I can’t stop watching this guy. He’s brilliant

  • @caffeinated324
    @caffeinated324 Před 4 měsíci +8

    For the first time i really got into thinking in physics out of curiosity rather than just memorizing it ..
    Thank you very much sir ....
    Your lectures really helps me a lot

  • @shashvatsrivastava9809
    @shashvatsrivastava9809 Před 2 lety +69

    Sir I am a 9th grade student From India.
    I want to become doctor and I used to love physics becoz your video make me love physics more and more...😍😍 Love you sir... You are a legend for those who wanted to learn conceptual things....😊

  • @shashwathello
    @shashwathello Před 4 lety +34

    You're a true legend sir... you never taught us to learn physics... you teach us to love it... really grateful to be able to learn and love it from you sir... love and respect from India

  • @nabinteemilsina6495
    @nabinteemilsina6495 Před 6 lety +27

    Professor lewin, I love physics from your lecture and I really feel that you gives best lecture among world.

  • @ashutoshmalik3411
    @ashutoshmalik3411 Před 5 lety +65

    one of the best lectures that i have seen

  • @suchitakothari7041
    @suchitakothari7041 Před 3 lety +5

    Excellent Teaching ! Professor, There is a big shortage of great physics teachers like u!I’m reviving my concepts by watching your lectures. Thankyou

  • @michaelchase5304
    @michaelchase5304 Před 2 lety +3

    I've been self-studying physics for 6.5 years, and now have curtailed my imagination to the basic laws of motion (Euler and Cauchy too) being that I'm truly a martial artist at heart. I always see at least one thing new it seems in each rendering of Newton's laws.

  • @ishakawade9100
    @ishakawade9100 Před rokem +17

    Dunno if thats jee or neet oriented or not but this is some op premium level content for sure! Seriously made me fall in love with phy, true to their words! thank you!

  • @anilparmar3266
    @anilparmar3266 Před 4 lety +22

    Thank you sir,
    Yesterday I demonstrated the modified engine to my students that you showed as an application of third law . The students were very happy to see such a beautiful demonstration. Your lectures made me love Physics and now I'm using them to make my students love Physics.

  • @connynordgren3679
    @connynordgren3679 Před 7 lety +200

    Great! This lecture was a reward for me. The first five was very informative and I have to study hard to understand everything. Now Newtons three laws was easy to understand. Thanks a lot!!!

  • @paradoxical_s
    @paradoxical_s Před 4 lety +32

    sir, its great to learn from u. I never expected that i would be learning from a man who started giving lectures way before i was born. Love from India

  • @warwick802
    @warwick802 Před rokem +4

    I love how these lectures by this brilliant man from years ago are helping me more than my professor's inadequate teaching style and his mickey mouse powerpoint presentations

  • @ministeriomundialliberando8403

    Your the best teacher I've ever watched. Please allow me to pay you strong respect. I graduate of mechanical engineer about 20 years ago and I've been relearning many of the topics of those years through your lectures.

  • @swatishankar5402
    @swatishankar5402 Před 5 lety +8

    Thank you sir for your wonderful interesting lectures (which is very rare today cause the teaching quality has gone so down). This help us a lot. Love from India.

  • @kyrelgaming3898
    @kyrelgaming3898 Před 3 lety +11

    This guy makes me want to pursue my love for physics further. He is a Lockdown legend

  • @nimalakers24
    @nimalakers24 Před 8 lety +30

    Thank you for the amazing lectures. To me they are like a t.v. series I like. After watching one lecture, I get excited to see what the next lecture holds. I used to hate physics but now I am starting to see the beauty of it.

  • @szymonyson3952
    @szymonyson3952 Před 5 lety +1

    J seriously love your films. That's not trivial, for free and not boring, like a lot's of books or other things on CZcams. Thank you very much.

  • @rakeshverma7895
    @rakeshverma7895 Před 3 lety +2

    I am so MAD at myself that I found these videos and lectures by Prof. Lewin in March!!! Had I found them last year I would have watched all the lectures from starting to end they are JUST AWWWWWWWWESOME.... now hardly any time is left for NEET exam!!!

  • @someoneydk
    @someoneydk Před 4 lety +88

    Dear sir, are your lectures enough for Indian exam JEE (Mains and Advanced)?

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 4 lety +248

      Watch all my 94 MIT course lectures. Start with 8.01, then 8.02, then 8.03. Do all the homework and take all my exams. Homework and exams are posted below the video thumbnails. *I guarantee you that you will then not fail the Physics portion of any exam*

    • @danielkinyanjui5296
      @danielkinyanjui5296 Před 3 lety +21

      The homework and exams, wrap your head around them, fondle, love and re-reason around them, that's the trick.

    • @LeucoJeetMusic
      @LeucoJeetMusic Před 3 lety +7

      The Most thought comment by me. THANK'S. 😊

    • @priyabratadas4864
      @priyabratadas4864 Před 3 lety +7

      @@lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259 ❤️

    • @oximas-oe9vf
      @oximas-oe9vf Před rokem

      @@lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259 thank you Sir

  • @manuelsorianogaitero2434
    @manuelsorianogaitero2434 Před 5 lety +8

    Walter Lewin, I want to show my deseo admiration for your great teaching career in MIT. You are one of most clever physics teacher i have ever heard in life. Im a 30 years experienced Civil engineer and I yet learn a new when i listen your lectures.

  • @brianlenhart9805
    @brianlenhart9805 Před 8 lety +1

    I wish I could have studied under you. You are a grand master of science; I will be like you some day, with my own personality mixed in. You are an inspiration. Thank you for having lived.

  • @jaysinec308
    @jaysinec308 Před 2 lety +1

    Professor your are man of the century who love and passionate about the physics.... Really blessed to watch your Lecture....

  • @imabstrong
    @imabstrong Před 5 lety +15

    Ahhh, you trickster, you. Changing your speed as you pulled! I would have voted for the top one too, but immediatly as I saw you pull it really fast I knew you made the bottom one snap on purpose! Making it snap before there is time for the block to even move.... Afterward, knowing the trick, I would have remained one who would not vote. Yet another brilliant lecture sir, emitting love for this amazing subject.

  • @SUBHASISBISWAS
    @SUBHASISBISWAS Před 7 lety +263

    The assigned number of the lecture Hall 26,100 is really strange..! Sometimes I wonder what is the total number of such large lecture Halls at MIT ??? Here in India, I've never seen such an well equipped lecture hall.

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 7 lety +345

      26-100 means building 26, "room" 100. 1 means first floor, thus it is room 00 on the first floor. There are at MIT only 3 lecture halls about as big as 26-100

    • @animals42life8
      @animals42life8 Před 4 lety +15

      @@lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259 top or bottom string, it depends on sudden or gradual pull.. correct professor lewin?:)

    • @utkarshpathak6548
      @utkarshpathak6548 Před 4 lety +22

      Shubhasis biswas there are such well equipped lecture halls in IIT and NIT

    • @harleydavidson1014
      @harleydavidson1014 Před 4 lety +28

      Ive unfortunately had a crisis in my family. It'll initially probably sound funny but its not. My dad is a college educated 4.0 perfect attendence student with an AP cert in aircraft mechanics and has recently came to believe the bible says the earth is flat so in his mind it must be. This is very disturbing to all the kids which obviously know the earth is round. Now he has even my mom believing this bs becsuse she is very religious as well. And they love saying things like, if the earth is spinning at 1,000 mph why arnt we flying off into space. Well thank you professor i can now answer that mathematically with total confidence. Ive enjoyed the lecture so much ive went on to watch about 5 more so im learning alot! Thanks alot for sharing these lectures professor Lewin you are helping this guy out...

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 4 lety +144

      @@harleydavidson1014 I am glad you are now educated. As far as Flat Earth people is concerned: Flat Earth is a religion with many followers. Religion is about BELIEFS regardless of the FACTS. Science is about verifiable FACTS regardless of one's BELIEFS. *NEVER EVER argue with anyone about their religion. It's anyone's right to believe what they want to believe even if it is pure nonsense (like the Flat Earth Religion).
      Rotating Earth video apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap190825.html
      *Ask all Flat Earth crazy friends to explain the following.*
      A total lunar eclipse can be seen by many people on Earth. Depending on where you live on Earth you may see the total eclipse shortly after sunset (the Moon is then near the horizon) or *at the very same time* high in the sky at night for people much further East on Earth where the sun has already set many hours ago. For all those who see the total eclipse near the horizon the umbra (shadow of the Earth near the Moon) should be a horizontal bar if the earth were flat but *it is ALWAYS a perfect circular disk no matter what the elevation of the Moon above the horizon is*

  • @user-vf7vh5gq6y
    @user-vf7vh5gq6y Před 4 lety +1

    I am a student in the faculty of engineering, aeronautics and spacecraft from Egypt. I love watching the videos of your honor, Doctor, and your explanation is very beautiful.

  • @JarmamStuff
    @JarmamStuff Před 3 lety

    I sat down to watch a few minutes of this. Was waiting for the twist at the end only to see that 49 minutes had already passed?
    You may not be a magician but you are a type of sorcerer for sure - mad respect to this teaching

  • @PhuongNguyen-xo9mv
    @PhuongNguyen-xo9mv Před 8 lety +10

    Thank you very much for your lectures. I have a mechanical engineering degree and working on my master, but I took all 3 physics courses from you. I wish I knew about these resources when I was taking physics. I hope you continue helping students around the world. Again, thank you! You're an excellent teacher.

  • @largequasarofknowledge1832
    @largequasarofknowledge1832 Před 4 lety +16

    Sir love your teaching luv from India

  • @afnaameerkozhithodi9714
    @afnaameerkozhithodi9714 Před 2 lety +1

    Hey sir,
    I began to hear your class a few days ago. And from your lectures, as you say i began to love physics and yoir class is very useful to me, where i was having several doubts. But now all that was cleared.
    And to be frank I'm an introvert infront of teachers so i refuse to ask doubts and moreover it's fully online.
    But ur lectures help me to overcome my doubts 😊

  • @wolfgamerz8824
    @wolfgamerz8824 Před rokem +1

    Lewin sir your way of teaching physics is excellent , i fell in love with physics after watching your lecture

  • @TheNickBasso
    @TheNickBasso Před 7 lety +17

    Professor Lewin, you are true so true saying that these lectures will make us love Physics. You are the best teacher in the world! Can't stop watching all of them.

  • @aaryastarks9972
    @aaryastarks9972 Před 4 lety +4

    Thank you so much Mr.Lewin because of you I could do some physics Great deal of respect for you

  • @tusharkantiroy5568
    @tusharkantiroy5568 Před 2 lety +1

    I find no higher learning in this lecture but
    Certainly have too, as a 15 age boy it's also clear to me that can help and give a crystal clear concept from this to anybody perhaps a college student or lower age class pupils, because the basics are all same, I thanks you from India, lots of respect too

  • @kanak7488
    @kanak7488 Před 2 lety +1

    I just started 9th grade studies in my summer vacation and the first chapter in my textbook is Laws of Motion, thank you sir for this lecture, helped a lot.

  • @TheElectromagno
    @TheElectromagno Před 8 lety +18

    he teaches it making us to love physics . thank you Walter for helping the humanity to understand this divine science

    • @mechagodzillakaijukillingm7464
      @mechagodzillakaijukillingm7464 Před 2 lety +1

      I love physics
      Soooooooo muchhhhhhhh
      I just can’t stop writing formulas
      Equations
      Problems
      Theorems
      It’s just
      Infinite the list is
      INFINITEEEE

  • @mehanaziqbal5434
    @mehanaziqbal5434 Před 3 lety +7

    Hi Professor! Just checking in on ya...hope you're safe and healthy during the pandemic.

  • @studywithjoy8754
    @studywithjoy8754 Před rokem +1

    Hello sir.. Take my Love and respect form Heart..i am a new student.. I have to say something.. As we know your class lecture make students study easy and joyful. when we start our journey as a science students at age 14 we don’t get wonderful lecture like you. Some of our teacher teaching us only reading book..we just Write and read we read formula Newton law,gravity, etc but teacher not show us real example..and for understand we only read some example in our book..for this reasons many student afraid in science. Next they give up and read another deperment..at early age we need study with fun, some practical example, that's why we love physics more and more... I believe if we get good lecture we can do better..

  • @rolo4640
    @rolo4640 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for the superb lectures. Your sincere love of education and comes through

  • @wanjalabramuel959
    @wanjalabramuel959 Před 2 lety +3

    Wow! Enjoyable and lively. Being a student teacher in Physics makes me feel the lecture indeed . This is absolutely amazing for sure. It confirms how real is Physics. I have to ape this and shape my profession too. Thumbs up.

    • @mr.krishna5482
      @mr.krishna5482 Před 2 lety

      Can you give me your Instagram account i wanna talk to you about this professor

  • @spandansaha5663
    @spandansaha5663 Před 4 lety +45

    sir i am a jee aspirant and i found your video lectures on 19th of september 2019 at 00:00am and from that time i have been constantly awake and i am not able to sleep because your lectures are just soo beautiful that i just keep watching them and cannot go to sleep. Thanks and huge respect for your efforts for such high quality education love from india

  • @painyt3055
    @painyt3055 Před rokem +1

    Hi professor,i am student of class 9th from India and i have attended all your lectures thoroughly and you are really the best teacher i have seen so far.

  • @mikewilliams1712
    @mikewilliams1712 Před 4 lety

    Walter you are an amazing physic teacher i never really got into physics till i came across you

  • @fkurcik
    @fkurcik Před 5 lety +8

    40:45: When you calculate forces in wires from condition of equilibrium, then the upper wire is more loaded (as he wrote on blackboard). However, there is a difference in how fast he applies the force. Without analyzing this deeper, I believe it's the inertia of the cube that resist's the impulse of force, which is reducing the load in upper wire. So, you can get two different situations, based on how quickly you pull the wire. Is this correct?

  • @andyde1809
    @andyde1809 Před 7 lety +66

    Thank you professor, another very nice lecture!!
    In the final experiment of the 2kg block is possible to see that the bottom string breaks only if the increase of the tension is very rapid. In this case, I think, the system has not the time to reach equilibrium and the bottom strings undergoes to higher tension in respect to the top string. If instead the tension increases slightly than the top string breaks because of the gravity in the 2kg block.
    Does anyone agree with me?

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 7 lety +155

      when I pull very fast the block has no time to move down thus the lower string will break. Only when the block moves down will the tension in the upper string increase.

    • @andyde1809
      @andyde1809 Před 7 lety +4

      Thank you!

    • @divyanshupandey5481
      @divyanshupandey5481 Před 4 lety +10

      @@lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259 I read all the comments just only to get answer from you. Thank you, professor. Huge #LOVE & #RESPECT from #INDIA

    • @rangerbeast
      @rangerbeast Před 2 lety +1

      Omg i passed

    • @daksharora7914
      @daksharora7914 Před 2 lety +1

      For jee aspirants, this wasn't a big deal. I am sure, 40-45 thousand students must have answered correctly

  • @abellizandro8743
    @abellizandro8743 Před 3 lety +1

    He fleshes out Newton in his teaching . Great lecturer

  • @huracan200173
    @huracan200173 Před 5 lety +2

    The reflection on the earth being moved by you playing with the ball is almost spiritual. What an amazing teacher he is.

  • @TheElectromagno
    @TheElectromagno Před 8 lety +9

    this professor of physics is a great master of this scienze and indeed a master of pedagogy because of the way and

  • @keviniqbalrodriguez1706
    @keviniqbalrodriguez1706 Před 4 lety +3

    This is dude is literally one of the best lecturers I’ve ever seen!!!!! I’m watching this as a refresher on Newton’s laws, and I was able to learn a lot more than I thought I would! Wish I had a physics teacher like this :((((((

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
    • @ranjeettate8676
      @ranjeettate8676 Před 3 lety

      You can find ways of loving Physics without Lewin and loving History without whoever you think is the CZcams "God". Lewin didn't have Lewin. I didn't have Lewin, but I found Feynman (in grad school, when I was going to teach physics!) and Eric Mazur, and Howard Zinn and Jared Diamond for History.
      I did poorly in Physics in college, not because I didn't have Lewin, but because I wasn't ready.

  • @dongguodan2128
    @dongguodan2128 Před 4 lety +2

    For the last question: when pull the string slowly, the force due to F can be delivered to the top string; but, when pull quickly, the bottom line breaks before the F is delivered to the top string.

  • @pravitsacademy3673
    @pravitsacademy3673 Před 3 lety +2

    About the red cube problem.
    It depends on how fast Prof is pulling the string. The key is that forces are not instantaneous, they take some time to propagate. We you were fast the bottom string broke because the force couldn't reach the upper string.
    Nice demonstration.

  • @aniljangra3107
    @aniljangra3107 Před 4 lety +20

    My intuition is like that , when first lower string is being accelerated , still upper string gets higher downward force, but lower string because of acceleration gets elongated fast upto breaking point (after getting plastically deformed) but in this fast span ( lower duration of time) the upper string didn't get enough time to get plastically deformed....that's why lower string gets break.
    In second case , ( where as well upper string bears higher load ) upper string gets enough time to elongate, as lower string is not being accelerated , therefore upper string got broken........

    • @Trilochan21265
      @Trilochan21265 Před 3 lety

      Right

    • @shahidanowar1614
      @shahidanowar1614 Před 3 lety +2

      So all depends on how fast he pulls it?

    • @Krishna-iy9vb
      @Krishna-iy9vb Před 3 lety +1

      @@shahidanowar1614 I think so. That was the difference of the two repetitions in the video

    • @wazeerali9487
      @wazeerali9487 Před 3 lety

      Sir plz tell us how you do this

    • @welkinator
      @welkinator Před 3 lety +3

      @@wazeerali9487 So by applying a steadily increasing force to the handle under the red cube the force is distributed gradually through the system. When he jerks on the handle the mass of the cube initially resists (inertia) the force in an outward (upward) direction which creates opposing forces within the string that then breaks at it's weakest point.
      So why does the upper string always break first with a steady pull? Likely because it is longer. Both strings will deform (stretch) but the upper one will lengthen proportionately more than the lower string. The diameter of each string will decrease as the lengthening increases but the upper one will always be smaller than the lower until the point of failure.
      BTW, this is just my guess.

  • @mdmobasshir595
    @mdmobasshir595 Před 2 lety +9

    The channel name is so real. He did make you fall for physics. I'm currently preparing for IIT-JEE examination and so just to brush up my past concepts i open this video. Oh Man, such a great teacher ❤😃

  • @justiceleague9918
    @justiceleague9918 Před 3 měsíci +1

    You will be teaching for centuries for upcoming generations ❤Respect:)

  • @pushkartatiya5940
    @pushkartatiya5940 Před 6 lety +2

    Brilliant!! I wish I had a professor like you..

  • @riscy00
    @riscy00 Před 4 lety +3

    I enjoyed this with closed caption, thank you!.

  • @backyard282
    @backyard282 Před 4 lety +4

    When it comes to the cube and the strings: in principle the top one should break first as predicted by his equations, however when he pulls very fast the tension in the bottom string increases so rapidly that it breaks before the tension in the top string has the time to increase to the breaking point.

  • @eeshdsgn
    @eeshdsgn Před 3 lety +2

    Amazing technique for drawing dotted line by adding force and creating the oscilation pattern with it !

  • @mathicscenter2419
    @mathicscenter2419 Před rokem +1

    I don't know why these guys are so serious during this interesting lecture...just feel the beauty of physics.....and fill yourself with full of dopamine😇

  • @Rohirat2026
    @Rohirat2026 Před rokem +4

    Thank you very much sir. I easily learn this topic. You are great sir.

  • @parthpatel6517
    @parthpatel6517 Před 4 lety +4

    When professor pulls string at high speed, red box deosnt move due to its higher inertia, and so bottom one breakdowns. And opposite in other case.

  • @nityapandey1137
    @nityapandey1137 Před 3 lety

    Wow what a lecture ,You increase the love of physics.

  • @ashitbarank
    @ashitbarank Před 2 lety +1

    Never got tired of your lectures. Thank you sir 🙏🙏❤❤

  • @andrewsanders5092
    @andrewsanders5092 Před 3 lety +3

    Watching one of these video's makes more sense to me than an entire semester of Physics 1 has in college.

  • @edman2740
    @edman2740 Před 7 lety +32

    On the red cube problem, I'm not entirely sure but doesn't it depend on the acceleration of your hand professor? I mean if you go fast there is little time to change the inertia of the object, therefore if you go slow there is enough time and you end up breaking the top one ?? Love the lectures btw, thanks for uploading them !

    • @michaelwang1730
      @michaelwang1730 Před 4 lety +9

      It depends on the force you pull. If you pull slowly, then the tension will increase in both strings uniformly, and the top one breaks. If you pull quickly, then the bottom one already reaches the maximum force before it ever reaches the top, and so the bottom string breaks.

    • @siamsama2983
      @siamsama2983 Před 4 lety +4

      @@michaelwang1730 but that's coz in reality the string is somewhat elastic. If the string was inextensible, then surely the top one would break always?

    • @carultch
      @carultch Před 2 lety +3

      @@siamsama2983 Inextensible strings don't really exist. They are a theoretical limiting case, to simplify the mathematics of a problem where the string's extension under load is negligible compared to the motion involved in the problem.
      In a theoretical inextensible string, the forces would travel through the string infinitely fast, and the upper string would always break. But such a string could not exist in reality, as elastic response in general is limited to the speed of sound in the material.

  • @allroundersupport104
    @allroundersupport104 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I am a Bankura Zilla School student, West Bengal, India.
    Our science teacher Soumitra Pati sent us this.
    Lovely video❤️

  • @shuvashishsharma1299
    @shuvashishsharma1299 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks a lot sir...this lecture helped me to solve many confusions about gravity and 3'rd law..

  • @vatsinshah9635
    @vatsinshah9635 Před 7 lety +16

    I am not out of high school yet. I am using your lectures presently to prepare for my ap. thank you so much for the uploads. Your videos have helped me a lot : )

  • @user-zv1wl9so1d
    @user-zv1wl9so1d Před 7 lety +4

    Thank God that your lectures are recorded
    شكراً دكتور ولتر لوين

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
    • @wazeerali9487
      @wazeerali9487 Před 3 lety

      @@lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259 sir plz tell us about last experiment how it may be possible sir plz tell us

    • @bobthegreat3627
      @bobthegreat3627 Před rokem +1

      @@wazeerali9487 If he pulled the string fast, the bottom one would break, since it won't get the time to reach the upper one
      Ans if he pulled it slowly, the top one would break...

  • @JAY_GYPSYSOLDIER
    @JAY_GYPSYSOLDIER Před 3 lety +1

    Well explained, I never see proffecer like this sir.

  • @parsurambehera4329
    @parsurambehera4329 Před 3 lety +1

    Love your style of teaching . 🙏🙏

  • @PaulSmith-rx8rh
    @PaulSmith-rx8rh Před 7 lety +7

    Thank you for sharing your lectures! They actually made me love physics.
    They were fundamental for my decision to do Electrical Engineering in college.
    You are awesome, professor. Thank you for everything.

  • @aryan9393
    @aryan9393 Před 3 lety +3

    sir, I just got my physics exam score with just a measly 50/96 on the exam. I just found your lectures and really like the way of teaching. Kindly wish me luck for the next test (light, reflection, and refraction). I am in to not fail the next one !!

  • @TheNC100
    @TheNC100 Před 5 lety +1

    In the last example left open the key point is that the strings are not inextensible.
    The upper string would always break if the string were almost exactly inextensible (well, the cube should also be perfectly rigid with no way to deform it).
    Please correct me if I'm wrong.
    BTW: your lectures are so wonderful. I love the fact that you put so much emphasis on showing with experiments each single theoric result. Theory beyond physics is wonderful, but physics is not mathematics: physic laws are correct until someone proves them wrong, so it is crucial to put to the test the theoric results. You are very insistent on this and I appreciate it so much.

  • @PedroRodrigues-ld9qf
    @PedroRodrigues-ld9qf Před 3 lety +2

    You're the best teacher ever! I'm from Brazil and i'm learning A LOT with you classes!! I can't understand so well because of my english, but it's easier to understand than in my school!

  • @harleydavidson1014
    @harleydavidson1014 Před 4 lety +4

    Thank you professor Lewin! I have to share a quick story hopefully youll enjoy. Recently ive unfortunately had a crisis in my family thats tearing it apart. Initially this might sound funny but its not for the families dealing with this. So my dad is a college graduate. 4.0 perfect attendence student that recieved his AP cert in aircraft mechanics so he is educated but recently these conspiracy theory flat earth vids have convinced him that the bible says the earth is flat so him being super religious and my mom as well they both think the earth is flat. They love saying things like "if the earth is spinning at 1,000 mph why arnt we flying off into space. Well professor, thanks to you i can confidently answer that question mathematically. I enjoyed the lecture so much ive went on to watch about 5 more. So thanks again hopefully by learning physics i can explain to them that the flat earth is impossible and bring my family back to reality and stop all the fighting between the parents and kids. If anyone reading this enjoyed it please like it so maybe the professor will see it at the top...

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 4 lety +5

      Flat Earth is a religion with many followers. Religion is about BELIEFS regardless of the FACTS. Science is about verifiable FACTS regardless of one's BELIEFS. *NEVER EVER argue with anyone about their religion. It's anyone's right to believe what they want to believe even if it is pure nonsense (like the Flat Earth Religion).
      Rotating Earth video apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap190825.html
      *Ask all your Flat Earth crazy friends to explain the following.*
      A total lunar eclipse can be seen by many people on Earth. Depending on where you live on Earth you may see the total eclipse shortly after sunset (the Moon is then near the horizon) or *at the very same time* high in the sky at night for people much further East on Earth where the sun set mnay hours earlier. For all those who see the total eclipse near the horizon the umbra (shadow of the Earth near the Moon) should be a horizontal bar if the earth were flat but *it is ALWAYS a perfect circular disk no matter what the elevation of the Moon is aboe the horizon*

  • @k.b.9738
    @k.b.9738 Před 4 lety +5

    Sir I am wondering what happens if we vacuume the air from inside of the Hero's engine? Does engine work? If it works, which way it moves? I know i read somethings about this in Feynman's notes but can't remember now. Thanks already.

    • @bitterbob30
      @bitterbob30 Před 3 lety

      Air isn't making the engine spin. The sphere at the bottom of the engine contains water. When he applies the torch, the water turns to steam and escapes out the ends of the tubes, thus mass is exiting the engine. Mass exiting the tubes has a reaction force on the tubes which causes the spin. Hero engine is a type of reaction steam turbine. The soda can example works due to the water leaving the can and is also the reason the holes in the can should be created by bending the nail in the same direction. If you alternated direction of the holes the reaction forces would cancel and you wind up with a big puddle of water under your can and no rotation (well probably a little bit since the holes won't be exactly the same, but you get the point).

  • @sanjibsaha8347
    @sanjibsaha8347 Před 3 lety +1

    Sir you don't teach us physics , you involve us to love physics and we fall in love in physics from HEART
    THANKS A LOT 🙏

  • @rishabhbajpai8340
    @rishabhbajpai8340 Před 3 lety +1

    I m preparing for jee advanced exam and these lectures are very helpful for me.

  • @nitheeshbs5756
    @nitheeshbs5756 Před 6 lety +143

    The best lecture ever.. Thank you professor..Will be useful for my JEE preparation.. :)

  • @marccowan3585
    @marccowan3585 Před 7 lety +11

    The string which breaks depends on the time over which the force is applied? That is that it as though the information that the bottom string is being pulled has not yet reached the top string yet?
    Perhaps I am wrong, but I believe I heard somewhere that it has something to do with the speed of sound in the material?
    Great lecture by the way, my new favourite thing on youthbe

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 7 lety +57

      The only way that the tension can increase in the upper sting is for the block to go down.
      But if you jerk at the bottom string there is no time for the block to go down (inertia). Thus the bottom strong breaks. If you pull slowly the block can easily and slowly go down, thus the upper string breaks first is the tension in it will then always be larger than in the bottom string.

  • @haseebulhassan1019
    @haseebulhassan1019 Před 3 lety +1

    Love from Pakistan. You are a great mentor. I’ve graduated as a mechanical and watching your all videos. Very helpful

  • @sushilbhardwaj_
    @sushilbhardwaj_ Před 2 lety +1

    Sir u r god for me I hated Physics earlier but now I m in love with Physics bcoz of u 🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗
    Love uh sir
    Long live walter sir 😊😊

  • @physicsbyprofmateen6631
    @physicsbyprofmateen6631 Před 4 lety +3

    Respected sir Walter ! you are my ideal teacher . I proud of you . i love your way of teaching .. You are great .. you my mentor. sir can i use your experimental portion of videos in my videos ?

  • @mayanksequation5232
    @mayanksequation5232 Před 2 lety +5

    The energy is what every physics teacher lives for.

  • @anuragpaul9240
    @anuragpaul9240 Před 3 lety

    Greatest regret of my life that din't have a passionate teacher like you in my entire student life. And discovered you in youtube after end of my student life 😔.

  • @tomoakhill8825
    @tomoakhill8825 Před rokem

    At 10:30 he explains that mass is an intrinsic property of matter, and not dependent on a force. In fact 4 years after this lecture the General Conference on Weights and Measures which defines the International System of Units, redefined the kilogram in terms of three fundamental physical constants: The speed of light c, a specific atomic transition frequency ΔνCs, and the Planck constant h. Using these numbers, it is possible to build an instrument the reads the mass of an object directly from the object.

  • @ritikkumar5562
    @ritikkumar5562 Před 2 lety +3

    Sir you say that body move with constant velocity along straight line...why are you used word( along straight lin) ..if you said constant velocity...

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 2 lety +3

      if the line is not straight then there must be ab acceleration to change the direction of the veloscity, thus there must be a force

    • @ritikkumar5562
      @ritikkumar5562 Před 2 lety +3

      Sir but it is not necessary to used straight line word with constant velocity...because constant velocity give information that magnitude of speed and direction remain constant...so sir it is not necessary to used straight line word with constant velocity ..

    • @ritikkumar5562
      @ritikkumar5562 Před 2 lety +3

      Sir constant speed along straight line is perfect....in compare of constant velocity along staraight line.....am I right or wrong sir.....you are my god sir...please reply me..

    • @ritikkumar5562
      @ritikkumar5562 Před 2 lety +2

      Sir please tell me....please please .....your every word of physics is very important for me...you are my god....sir you say constant velocity along straight line...are you wrong .

  • @huracan200173
    @huracan200173 Před 5 lety +3

    I imagine the last one has to do with inertia, the 2kg mass refuses to move so quickly as Dr Lewin is trying to, so the bottom one breaks. When you do it slowly, the upper one does.

  • @mishmessythoughts
    @mishmessythoughts Před 3 měsíci

    Sir you are a genius, I am very near to JEE and for the love of physics, i am watching all your lectures as they are not very long. I love it. Thank you very much for existing 🥰 We all love you from India ❤

  • @sppremsarimella4915
    @sppremsarimella4915 Před 5 lety +1

    im an A-level physics, ur videos helping me to make my classes more lively. Thanq

  • @sharks3010
    @sharks3010 Před 3 lety +6

    It's always impressive to me how he draws his dotted lines.

    • @kundangupta4266
      @kundangupta4266 Před 3 lety +1

      you just have to hold the chalk perpendicular to the board and boom..

  • @fabriziotabasso1694
    @fabriziotabasso1694 Před 8 lety +3

    Now that I have discovered Walter Lewin's lectures I wake up every day excited to learn new concepts and I see physics from a different point of view.
    I was already a big fan of physics, now I also have good resources to improve and expand my knowledge.
    I'm not english mother tongue but Walter Lewis's lectures are easy to follow and understand because everything is logically connected and beautifully explained.
    I'm studying physics in an undergrad course in Australia and I don't like my professor at all, but maybe it is not his fault, it's just hard to compete with a professor like Walter Lewin.
    Thank you for all the time and efforts you have put in your lectures.

  • @snquiz9977
    @snquiz9977 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm always clear with your lectures sir👏

  • @raihanshaik
    @raihanshaik Před 3 lety +2

    Sir my love for physics is incomparable to you but I feel physics in my inner heart and your leactures are just vvvvvv amazing. I wondered if taught for IIT jee exam then I would be your first student. When I will grow up I will meet you once for sure

    • @seanderobillard5765
      @seanderobillard5765 Před 2 lety +1

      Apparently if you watch all 94 of his MIT lectures starting with 8.01 and complete the homework/exams in the description of each video, Walter guarantees you will pass the physics portion to ANY exam. So yes, everything he teaches us here can be applied to IIT jee exam