ME3120 · Dynamic Modelling
Theme 2 · Newton's method

Newton's laws & free-body diagrams

The oldest modelling tool: isolate a body, draw its forces, and write force = mass × acceleration. The recipe we'll run on every machine.

Source: course notes, Week 1 foundations.

Before you start

What you need first

  • Generalized coordinates \(q\) — one per degree of freedom.
  • State \([q,\dot q]\) — and that the laws give acceleration \(\ddot q\).

What you'll be able to do

  • Use the 5-step recipe for any machine.
  • Write Newton's law for straight-line and turning motion.
  • Draw a correct free-body diagram (FBD).

The 5-step recipe — used on every machine

1Draw it & set the boundary. A clear picture. What is inside the system, what is outside?
2Choose coordinates \(q\). One per DOF. Mark the positive direction.
3Account for forces. Draw a free-body diagram (today) — or write the energies (next theme).
4Write the balance. Newton: \(\sum F=m\ddot x,\ \ \sum\tau=I\ddot\theta\).
5Check. Units match? Sensible at the limits? Where does it rest?
We run these same five steps on every machine — from a spring next, to a full robot arm later.

Newton's law — straight-line motion

$$\sum F = m\,\ddot x$$
where:
SymbolMeaningSI unit
\(\sum F\)all forces added together (with sign)N
mmasskg
\(\ddot x\)accelerationm/s²
In words: (total push) = (mass) × (acceleration).

Newton's law — turning motion

$$\sum \tau = I\,\ddot\theta$$
where:
SymbolMeaningSI unit
\(\sum \tau\)all torques added together (with sign)N·m
Imoment of inertia — the "rotational mass"kg·m²
\(\ddot\theta\)angular accelerationrad/s²
In words: (total twist) = (rotational inertia) × (angular acceleration).

The same idea, twice

Straight lineTurning
force \(F\)torque \(\tau\)
mass \(m\)inertia \(I\)
acceleration \(\ddot x\)angular acc. \(\ddot\theta\)
\(\sum F = m\ddot x\)\(\sum\tau = I\ddot\theta\)
🔭 Looking ahead: robots turn at their joints, so the torque version is the one we use most once we reach the arm.

How to draw a free-body diagram

  1. Isolate one body — imagine cutting it free from everything else.
  2. Draw every outside force as an arrow: gravity, normal, friction, applied push.
  3. Pick a positive direction and keep it for the whole problem.
  4. Add the forces along each axis → that sum is \(\sum F\).
m mg N F f
Isolate the block; draw only the outside forces acting on it.
Golden rule: only forces from outside the body go on the diagram. There is no "\(m\ddot x\) arrow" — that lives on the other side of the equation.
📐 Worked example

Find the acceleration from an FBD

A crate of mass \(m = 5\ \text{kg}\) is pushed along the floor by a horizontal force \(F = 20\ \text{N}\). Friction opposes the motion with a force \(f = 5\ \text{N}\). Find the acceleration.

5 kg F = 20 N f = 5 N mg N +x
Free-body diagram of the crate, with the numbers from the problem.
1Pick \(+x\) in the push direction and sum the horizontal forces:
$$\sum F = F - f = 20 - 5 = 15\ \text{N}$$
2Apply \(\sum F = m\ddot x\) and solve for \(\ddot x\):
$$\ddot x = \frac{\sum F}{m} = \frac{15}{5} = 3\ \text{m/s}^2$$
The vertical forces (weight \(mg\) down, normal \(N\) up) cancel, so they don't affect the horizontal motion — exactly why the FBD keeps the axes separate.

✏️ Try it yourself

A crate of mass \(m = 4\ \text{kg}\) is pushed with \(F = 22\ \text{N}\); friction opposes it with \(f = 6\ \text{N}\). Find the acceleration.

Step 1. \(\sum F = 22 - 6 = 16\ \text{N}\) Step 2. \(\ddot x = \dfrac{16}{4} = 4\ \text{m/s}^2\)

Recap — the whole topic on one screen

IdeaWhat you own now
The 5-step recipeDraw → coordinates → forces → balance → check
Newton (line)\(\sum F = m\ddot x\)
Newton (turning)\(\sum\tau = I\ddot\theta\)
Free-body diagramIsolate the body; only outside forces; pick a + direction

Next topic

The mass–spring–damper

Now we run the recipe for real on the most important system in dynamics — building its equation of motion one term at a time.

→ The mass–spring–damper