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According to the Third Newton's law of motion:

For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.

So, I understand that if I hit a brick wall with $50\, \mathrm{lbs}$ of force, the brick wall also hits me with $50\, \mathrm{lbs}$ of force (usually painfully). In this instance, Newton's third law makes sense. What I'm confused about is, if I hit a patch of drywall with $50\, \mathrm{lbs}$ of force, it's probably going to break, and due to the lack of pain in my hand, I can tell it did not hit me back with $50\, \mathrm{lbs}$ of force.

How does Newton's third law apply to situations when one object or the other is destroyed? It certainly seems like at that point it is incapable of delivering the full force of my blow back to me. What happens with the energy?

Sidney
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    It did hit you back with 50 lbs of force. It's just that 50 lbs is too much for the dry wall to handle without breaking. – zh1 Jul 26 '16 at 14:13
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    As a perhaps more real-world (and somewhat more puzzling) example, a martial artist that breaks a wooden plank will experience rather little pain, whereas failing to break it can cause some substantial damage. – Emilio Pisanty Jul 26 '16 at 14:16
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    It's a big deal in paintballing - a paintball that breaks stings - a paintball that doesn't break hurts like a sunuva. – corsiKa Jul 26 '16 at 15:44
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    I think the cheap answer would be that you cannot hit a patch of drywall with 50 lbs of force if it would only take 30 lbs before breaking. You hit with 30 lbs, it hit you with 30 lbs, then it broke. The fact that you could have hit with 50 lbs doesn't matter. – kleineg Jul 26 '16 at 15:47
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    Also, just a nitpick, but the average person can punch with around 200-500 lbs of force. Professional martial artists and boxers can clock in the 1000-2000 lbs range. It is a lot more than most people think, that is why people can be seriously hurt in fistfights. – kleineg Jul 26 '16 at 15:50
  • @kleineg Not surprising. I should also probably check to make sure that 50 lbs would in fact break drywall (I'm not sure that it would unless it were a full 4x8 ft sheet) =D – Sidney Jul 26 '16 at 15:52
  • @kleineg is on point – Steeven Jul 26 '16 at 20:33
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    I think that looking at force (anything measured in lbs) is misleading here, when the momentum of your fist is more relevant. – Jyrki Lahtonen Jul 27 '16 at 08:59
  • Ik I'm very late. And the answers relating to impulse are quite insightful about the entire action of you punching the wall and it breaking. But I think if we consider this situation instantaneously, then each particle of the wall that comes in contact with a force will momentarily apply an equal and opposite force on the particle(s) creating that force before getting pushed back and the reaction force ends but the action force continues, so your hand can keep moving forward. So basically, I think, the action force applying particles will be stationary for a very small moment. – Robert Page Jan 31 '24 at 05:48

6 Answers6

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You've caught a non-intuitive part of Newton's 3rd law. It's actually applying in the case you mention, but because the objects involved are of dissimilar hardness it's easy to perceive the impact as a violation of the law.

Impacts are actually really complicated. Consider this slow motion video of a punch to the gut. We won't be able to cover all of the complexities we see here, but we can layer a few of them together to try to explain why the non-inutitive results you get are actually correct applications of Newton's 3rd law.

The key thing which makes impacts so complicated is that we have to pay attention to momentum. When you punch the brick wall or the drywall, your hand has quite a lot of momentum. When you punch the brick wall, that momentum has to be stopped. The only way to do this is through the reactionary force of the wall pushing back on your hand. The more momentum your hand has, the more reactionary force you deal with. In your brick example, that reactionary force is 50lbs, and the corresponding force of your hand on the wall is also 50lbs.

In the drywall case, we need to make a few adjustments. The first is to note that your hand goes through the drywall. It does not have to be stopped by the wall. This points out that the reactionary force will be less than it was in the brick wall case, because the brick wall had to stop the fist.

Well, almost. I cheated slightly, and that cheat may be a source of non-intuitive behavior. The more correct statement is that the brick wall had to impart more impulse to your hand, because it had to stop your hand. Impulse is force*time, and is a measure of change in momentum. The key detail here is that the distance can change. If you drop a superball on the ground, it rebounds almost back to where you threw it from. The impulse applied to the ball by the ground is very high. Contrast that with a steel ball bearing with the same mass as the superball, which does not rebound as much. The impulse applied to the bearing is lower. However, the superball deforms a great deal on impact, so it has a longer time to apply that impulse over. It is reasonable that superball could be subjected to less force than the ball bearing, and yet bounce higher because that lower force was applied for a longer distance.

In the case of the punch, we're lucky that 99% of the deformation in your punch occurs in your hand. Your skin and fat squish out of the way until your bones start to have to move. The shock in theory works its way all the way up your arm. However, we can ignore all of that for now, because we're just doing comparisons. It's the same hand in both the brick wall punch and the drywall punch, so it can be expected to deform in similar ways over similar distances and similar times. This is how we can claim that the brick wall punch must have a higher force. We know the impulse must be higher (because it stopped your hand, and the drywall punch didn't), and the times are the same for the reaction to both punches, so the brick wall punch must have more force.

Thus, the truth is that you did not punch the drywall with 50lbs. You actually supplied less force than that. In fact, you supplied just enough force to break the internal bonds that were keeping the drywall solid. Intuitively, we like to measure punches in forces (claiming a 50lb punch), but it's actually not possible to punch that hard unless the thing being punched is capable of providing a corresponding reactionary force! If you layered enough pieces of drywall to have the structural integrity to provide 50lbs of force, you would find that you don't break through, and it hurts almost as much as the bricks did (the first sheet of drywall will deform a little, so it wont hurt as much as the brick)

The issue of breaking through the wall is actually a very important thing for martial artists. Those who break boards or bricks in demonstrations all know that it hurts far more if you fail to break the board or brick. That's because the board stopped all of your forward momentum, meaning you had a lot of impulse over a short time, meaning a lot of force. If you break the brick, the reactionary forces don't stop your hand, so they are less. I would wager that the greatest challenge of breaking bricks with a karate chop is not breaking them, but in having conditioned your body and mind such that you can withstand the impulse when you fail to break them.

Tarun
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Cort Ammon
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  • Good discussion, but you have a major error: impulse is force × time, not distance. – Michael Seifert Jul 26 '16 at 16:37
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    Can somebody link a glass breaking video? I didn't quite understand the process and some visual aid would be appreciated. – user1306322 Jul 26 '16 at 18:15
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    "it's actually not possible to punch that hard unless the thing being punched is capable of providing a corresponding reactionary force" I propose bolding this! – Lightness Races in Orbit Jul 26 '16 at 18:43
  • @LightnessRacesinOrbit Good call – Cort Ammon Jul 26 '16 at 19:45
  • This is LOOSELY (please re-read: LOOSELY) similar to why a bullet which passes through a target tends (please re-read: TENDS) to be less deadly than one that stops inside the target. Obviously there are a lot more things going on, but understanding one can give the first grips on understanding the other for some. – Nanban Jim Jul 26 '16 at 19:46
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    @user1306322 I tried to find a video, because it is a really odd process when put in words. I came across it in a book when I was learning to cut glass a long time ago; they had pictures. It does seem to be an unusual way to do it -- most people choose to score the circle first when I look at videos, which seems much more sane. I included it because I found it to be a very neat use of the dynamics of shockwaves, but given that I'm having trouble finding resources for it, I'm debating just taking it off entierly. – Cort Ammon Jul 26 '16 at 19:57
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    Don't remove it. Somebody else might come across a video like that or make one themselves eventually. It would be a shame to lose such an illustration. – user1306322 Jul 27 '16 at 06:03
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    Re that last sentence, the hardest part of breaking stuff is simply committing to an all-out punch. Even if you've broken stuff before, it's often very hard to convince your subconscious that the thing is actually going to break, so many people don't punch as hard as they need to, in a subconscious attempt to not get hurt as bad. Of course, this then results in the board not breaking and the punch being much more painful. Once you understand this, though, it's easier to begin to internalize just how hard you do need to punch. – Emilio Pisanty Jul 27 '16 at 21:53
  • @nitsua60 The bolded part actually says "it's actually not possible to punch that hard unless the thing being punched is capable of providing a corresponding reactionary force!" It's really just a restatement of Newton's 3rd law. I chose that wording rather than talking about the forces that it takes to break something to handle the case you mention. The reactionary force of the wall would be the sum of the forces distributed to the rest of the wall (and eventually to the Earth), plus the forces which accelerate the broken object. I can add a footnote to that if you think it helps. – Cort Ammon Jul 28 '16 at 16:07
  • It also handles the funny issues of plasticity nicely. When dealing with plastic materials, breaking isn't 100% force dependent. It also has other aspects which I didn't want to have to bring in (such as the duration of the force). Newton's 3rd law still holds, its just calculating the acceleration terms to figure out how the force was distributed can get more complicated. Simply talking about "a corresponding reactionary force" avoids having to deal with those complications. – Cort Ammon Jul 28 '16 at 16:08
  • Fair, but a bit misleading, perhaps? Because everything is capable of providing any desired reactionary force, limited only by the motive agent's ability to, itself, accelerate? – nitsua60 Jul 28 '16 at 16:10
  • @nitsua60 I wanted to be very clear that in 100% of situations, you can apply Newton's 3rd law, and that it applies even when your intuition suggests it is wrong. Whether everything is capable of providing a desired reactionary force is actually a very complicated question which includes both parties (the fist and the wall). Consider a 10 ton sheet metal cutter. It's called "10 ton" because it can apply 10 tons of force to a static object, similar to the brick wall. Put a tootsie roll in the way instead of a piece of metal, and you will not reach 10 tons of force on the tootsie roll. – Cort Ammon Jul 28 '16 at 16:17
  • The point I think you are going towards is for fast objects, such as collisions at hypersonic speeds, where everything with mass starts acting more like a static object, and you get wierd results. However, we can push it even faster: get to relatavistic speeds, and you find your ability to generate force is limited by the repulsive forces you can generate as your atoms plow through theirs. – Cort Ammon Jul 28 '16 at 16:18
  • Sticking to smaller examples, closer to the world of punching walls, it is not possible to punch a cotton ball fast enough to generate the forces needed to break the bones in your hand. The cotton ball cannot generate those forces needed until you explore much higher velocities than you find without the assistance of vehicles (potentially orbital vehicles, given just how low density cotton balls are) – Cort Ammon Jul 28 '16 at 16:22
  • "If you break the brick, the reactionary forces don't stop your hand, so they are less." How is it true? The brick will apply the force it is capable of until it breaks and it will do it in a short time as it will break very quickly after coming in contact with the part of the body which is used for breaking it, say hand. So, the pain would be the same in both the cases. If not, why? – Suyash Ishan Feb 20 '20 at 05:05
  • @SuyashIshan THe pain is not just from the surface. It is true that the skin of the hand will indeed stop in both cases, but the body is surprisingly malleable. Parts of the hand/arm further from the surface of the impact still have momentum which must be nullified if the hand is to reach a standstill. In both cases, the brick will start to decelerate parts of the body, but in the case where the brick does not break, those processes must continue until the arm is motionless. – Cort Ammon Feb 20 '20 at 05:52
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What makes you think that the maximum force you applied to the dry wall was anything like the maximum force you applied to the brick? It certainly wasn't. The dry wall gave way well before you were able to attain the same force as applied to the brick. Try punching the air and see how much force you are able to apply. The experimental evidence that the force you applied to the brick (and it applied to you) was higher than the force you applied to the dry wall was your injured hand.

Chet Miller
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  • Irrespective of the down vote I received, I stand by what I said. – Chet Miller Jul 26 '16 at 17:02
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    While the other answers provide some interesting extra detail, I think this is a better answer because it does actually answer the question while getting more quickly to the crux of the matter. – Jim Oldfield Jul 27 '16 at 10:41
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There is no doubt the Newton's third law holds in this case. The source of confusion is the fact that you are neglecting the time interval of the collision as well as the momentum change the colliding body. As we shall see it is incorrect to assume you applied the same force in both cases just because you started with the same initial conditions, i.e. the same speed.

The best way to approach this problem is by considering the momentum principle. By Newton's second law we obtain the momentum change of the body after the collision, $$\Delta p=\int_{t_1}^{t_2} F\mathrm dt,$$ where $F$ is the force the wall does on the body and $\Delta t=t_2-t_1$ is the time interval of the collision.

Now let us assume you run with a given speed against a wall. Since the time interval of the collision is quite short we can approximate $$\Delta p= F_{\textrm{av}}\Delta t,$$ where $F_{\textrm{av}}$ is the average value of the force during the collision. Hence $$|F_{\textrm{av}}|=\frac{|\Delta p|}{\Delta t},$$ where we took the absolute value just for simplicity. What matters is that the greater the speed change the greater the force. The shorter the time of the collision the greater the force.

When hitting an unbreakable wall you at least stay at rest right after the collision so the momentum change is $\Delta p=0-mv_i$ where $v_i$ is the (initial) speed right before hitting the wall. The average force the wall does on you is $$|F_{\textrm{av}}|=\frac{mv_i}{\Delta t}.$$

If you run against a breakable wall instead your momentum change $\Delta p=mv_f-mv_i$, where $v_f>0$ is the (final) speed right after the collision, since you still go forwards right after you break the wall. The time interval of the collision is $\Delta t'$ which is greater than $\Delta t$, since you did not suddenly stop. Then the average force $F_{\textrm{av}}'$ the breaking wall does on the body is $$|F_{\textrm{av}}'|=\frac{m|v_i-v_f|}{\Delta t'}<\frac{mv_i}{\Delta t}=|F_{\textrm{av}}|.$$ Therefore even hitting the walls in the same way, the forces the wall applied on you are different. It is lesser in the second case. Notice that this is the same as saying the average force you applied to the breakable wall is lesser than the one you applied to the unbreakable wall.

It is also interesting to note that this question provides and example of the far more usefulness of the concept of linear momentum than of the Newton's third law. The latter is contained in the former but it can easily leads to misconceptions such as the one showed in this question or this one.

Diracology
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    What you say is true, but the larger effect, at least in the example posed by the OP, are internal binding forces that must be overcome, making the difference between what's largely an elastic collision in the case of the brick, and inelastic with the wallboard. – docscience Jul 26 '16 at 14:39
  • @docscience Exactly, thanks for pointing this out! – Diracology Jul 26 '16 at 14:48
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TL;DR: The physics of hitting things are not as easy as exerting a constant force on something.

What I am trying to say with that is that Newton's law of course applies, but it would be more obvious to see it if you were just pushing/leaning against the wall with your weight. Then I'd say the two walls probably feel roughly the same.

So what is different about hitting a wall? There is a changing force. You may argue what happens using that, e.g. @Diracology has already made some points about that, I will stay on a more intuitive path here. Hitting a wall (e.g. with your fist) is better modelled as a "collision" rather than constant force process. It is thus the energy that determines how "painful" it is to hit the wall $^1$. Energy is also conserved. So for the hard brickwall a lot of that energy goes into deforming your hand, which is felt painfully. For the drywall the situation is different: it can absorb more of the energy itself by deforming/breaking and therefore heroically saving you some pain

Fun fact: this has applications in the physics of martial arts. E.g. in boxing a straight punch will often be of "pushing type" (i.e. the boxer leaning into it, putting a lot of mass behind the punch), aiming to transfer momentum and throw the other boxer off balance. Hook punches however are aimed to transfer more energy to the head (by simply making the punch as fast as possible), thus causing more deformation/damage. For example slapping someone can in fact be very dangerous for that exact reason...


$^1$ Momentum is still conserved, but it does not tell you much for this kind of process. Saying "hitting something with $50\;\mathrm{lbs}$ of force" does not really make sense. That would apply for a pushing like process though.

lucas
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Wolpertinger
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The more fundamental thing to understand are the conservation laws, particularly the conservation of momentum and of energy. The availability of energy gives rise to force. When you move your fist towards an object at a particular velocity you contain within it a kinetic energy and momentum.

Materials are held together with binding forces that, at the finest level, are tied to the fundamental electromagnetic force. Chemical bonds tie matter together, and at larger scales crystalline structures. So depending on the material, the way it was fabricated, and its particular geometry determines an intra-binding force. And although brick and gypsum board may have a common base of $\mathrm{SiO_2}$ chemically, the way they were fabricated, and their particular geometry causes the brick to have significantly greater internal binding force.

So when fist meets surface the conservation of energy and momentum say that energy and momentum must go somewhere after the collision. Nothing is ever lost, you just have to look closely as to where it goes. In the case of the brick, the internal binding forces tend to keep the brick together and so the energy tends to bounce back into your fist as an elastic collision. But in the case of the gypsum board, if you have just the right amount of energy and momentum, it might be enough to overcome the internal forces, and so that energy does not bounce back. You have an inelastic collision.

docscience
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  • ... and I should have probably mentioned, the structure of your fist also has limited internal binding force. So it's the matter of which yields first, the wall or your fist. – docscience Jul 26 '16 at 14:35
  • When I hit a wall with my hand, it doesn't bounce off. So it's absolutely not an elastic collision. –  Jul 26 '16 at 14:47
  • @tfb If you had a hand without joints, that can not change it's shape, it would bounce off, I assume. And note you can bring your hand back to the original shape. If not, it was not elastic. – Volker Siegel Jul 28 '16 at 15:29
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I think you should look at Newton's 3rd law in a frame where forces are balanced and the initial impact transition has settled. e.g. when you hit the wall with 50 lbs force, even if you have good muscle control and apply close to 50 lbs to your hand, it does not move in a linear acceleration because it has to fight its way through a complex multi degree of freedom skeletal-muscle system. But ignoring that when your fist hits the brick wall it starts to decelerate but in many stages:

1- soft tissue covering your bones gets compressed but adds small resistance.
2- then the forward part of your knuckles and ligaments and bones.
3- then more momentum by your arm.
Newton 3rd law is perfectly valid if and only if after feeling the pain you still keep 50 lbs force on your hand when it has come to full stop.
The early stages of impact forces ar not balanced yet. Because some of your force is spent decelerating your hand and some applied to brick wall.

Same thing happens in case of drywall. The drywall can take only a fraction of your force before it collapses, but if you would not stop after crashing the wall and keep applying 50 lbs ( meaning you'd have to run with drywall stuck on the end of your arm awkwardly) and let it accelerate by Newtons 2nd law F = m.a then the drywall will react to your hand with 50 lbs force in opposite direction!

kamran
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