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First Day on Notes ya! Introduction to 1-D Motion Distance versus Displacement
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Page 1: Motion in one direction

First Day on Notes ya!

Introduction to 1-D MotionDistance versus Displacement

Page 2: Motion in one direction

Kinematics

Kinematics is the branch of mechanics that describes the motion of objects without necessarily discussing what causes the motion.

1-Dimensional Kinematics (or 1-Dimensional motion) refers to motion in a straight line.

Page 3: Motion in one direction

Distance

The total length of the path traveled by an object is called distance.

“How far have you walked?” is a typical distance question.

The SI unit of distance is the meter (m).

Page 4: Motion in one direction

Displacement ( x )

The change in the position of a particle is called displacement.

is a Greek letter used to represent the words “change in”. x therefore means “change in x”. It is always calculated by final value minus initial value.

“How far are you from home?” is a typical displacement question.

The SI unit for displacement is the meter. Calculation of displacement:

f ix x x

Page 5: Motion in one direction

A

B

50 mdisplacement

100 m

distance

Distance vs Displacement

A picture can help you distinguish between distance and displacement.

Page 6: Motion in one direction

Questions

Does the odometer in your car measure distance or displacement?

Can you think of a circumstance in which it measures both distance and displacement?

Page 7: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: Two tennis players approach the net to congratulate one another after a game. a) Find the distance and displacement of player A. b) Repeat for player B.

A B5 m 2 m

Page 8: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: If x is the displacement of a particle, and d is the distance the particle traveled during that displacement, which of the following is always a true statement? a) d = |x|b) d < |x|c) d > |x|d) d > |x|e) d < |x|

Page 9: Motion in one direction

Practice ProblemA particle moves from x = 1.0 meter to x = -1.0 meter.What is the distance d traveled by the particle?

What is the displacement of the particle?

Page 10: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: You are driving a car on a circular track of diameter 40 meters. After you have driven around 2 ½ times, how far have you driven, and what is your displacement?

Page 11: Motion in one direction

Average Speed

Average speed describes how fast a particle is moving. The equation is:

Average speed is always a positive number.

where: save = average speed d = distance t = elapsed time The SI unit of speed is the m/s

ave

ds

t

Page 12: Motion in one direction

Average Velocity

Average velocity describes how fast the displacement is changing. The equation is:

Average velocity is + or – depending on direction.

where: vave = average velocity x = displacement t = elapsed time The SI unit of velocity is the m/s.

ave

xv

t

Page 13: Motion in one direction

Qualitative Demonstrations

1) Demonstrate the motion of a particle that has an average speed and an average velocity that are both zero.

2) Demonstrate the motion of a particle that has an average speed and an average velocity that are both nonzero.

3) Demonstrate the motion of a particle that has an average speed that is nonzero and an average velocity that is zero.

4) Demonstrate the motion of a particle that has an average velocity that is nonzero and an average speed that is zero.

Page 14: Motion in one direction

Quantitative Demonstration

You are a particle located at the origin. Demonstrate how you can move from x = 0 to x = 10.0 and back with an average speed of 0.5 m/s.

What the particle’s average velocity for the above demonstration?

Page 15: Motion in one direction

Cart Track Lab

Purpose: To take appropriate measurements, tabulate data, and calculate average velocity. Use your lab notebook.

Instructions: Using the cart track, cart, pulley, hanging mass, and stopwatch, determine the average speed and average velocity of the cart as it travels from one end of the track to the other.

See the board for details on how to use your lab notebook to keep a neat and accurate record of your lab.

Page 16: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: How long will it take the sound of the starting gun to reach the ears of the sprinters if the starter is stationed at the finish line for a 100 m race? Assume that sound has a speed of about 340 m/s.

Page 17: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: You drive in a straight line at 10 m/s for 1.0 km, and then you drive in a straight line at 20 m/s for another 1.0 km. What is your average velocity?

Page 18: Motion in one direction

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Page 19: Motion in one direction

Graphical Problem

Demonstrate the motion of this particle.

t

x

Page 20: Motion in one direction

Graphical Problem

Demonstrate the motion of this particle.

t

x

Page 21: Motion in one direction

Graphical Problem

What physical feature of the graph gives the constant velocity from A to B?

t

xx

tA

Bvave = x/t

Page 22: Motion in one direction

Graphical Problem: Determine the average velocity from the graph.

x (m)

Page 23: Motion in one direction

Graphical Review Problem

Demonstrate the motion of these two particles.

t

x

Page 24: Motion in one direction

Graphical Problem

Demonstrate the motion of these two particle.

t

v

Page 25: Motion in one direction

Graphical Problem

t

x

What kind of motion does this graph represent?

Page 26: Motion in one direction

Graphical Problem

Can you determine average velocity from the time at point A to the time at point B from this graph?

t

x ABx

t

vave = x/t

Page 27: Motion in one direction

Graphical Problem: Determine the average velocity between 1 and 4 seconds.

Page 28: Motion in one direction

Instantaneous Velocity

The velocity at a single instant in time. If the velocity is uniform, or constant,

the instantaneous velocity is the same as the average velocity.

If the velocity is not constant, than the instantaneous velocity is not the same as the average velocity, and we must carefully distinguish between the two.

Page 29: Motion in one direction

Instantaneous Velocity

Draw a tangent line to the curve at B. The slope of this line gives the instantaneous velocity at that specific time.

t

xB x

t

vins = x/t

Page 30: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: Determine the instantaneous velocity at 1.0 second.

Page 31: Motion in one direction

Acceleration (a)

Any change in velocity over a period of time is called acceleration.

The sign (+ or -) of acceleration indicates its direction.

Acceleration can be… speeding up slowing down turning

1

Page 32: Motion in one direction

Questions

If acceleration is zero, what does this mean about the motion of an object?

Is it possible for a racecar circling a track to have zero acceleration?

Page 33: Motion in one direction

Uniform (Constant) Acceleration

In Physics B, we will generally assume that acceleration is constant.

With this assumption we are free to use this equation:

The SI unit of acceleration is the m/s2.

va

t

3

Page 34: Motion in one direction

Acceleration in 1-D Motionhas a sign!

If the sign of the velocity and the sign of the acceleration is the same, the object speeds up.

If the sign of the velocity and the sign of the acceleration are different, the object slows down.

Page 35: Motion in one direction

Qualitative Demonstrations

1) Demonstrate the motion of a particle that has zero initial velocity and positive acceleration.

2) Demonstrate the motion of a particle that has zero initial velocity and negative acceleration.

3) Demonstrate the motion of a particle that has positive initial velocity and negative acceleration.

4) Demonstrate the motion of a particle that has negative initial velocity and positive acceleration.

Page 36: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: A 747 airliner reaches its takeoff speed of 180 mph in 30 seconds. What is its average acceleration?

Page 37: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: A horse is running with an initial velocity of 11 m/s, and begins to accelerate at –1.81 m/s2. How long does it take the horse to stop?

Page 38: Motion in one direction

Graphical Problem

Demonstrate the motion of this particle. Is it accelerating?

t (s)

v (m/s)

0.50

Page 39: Motion in one direction

Graphical Problem

Demonstrate the motion of this particle. Is it accelerating?

t

v

Page 40: Motion in one direction

Graphical Problem

What physical feature of the graph gives the acceleration?

t

vv

tA

Ba = v/t

Page 41: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: Determine the acceleration from the graph.

Page 42: Motion in one direction

How would you describe the motion of this particle?

Practice Problem: Determine the displacement of the object from 0 to 4 seconds.

Page 43: Motion in one direction

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Kinematic Equations and Graphs

Page 44: Motion in one direction

Position vs Time Graphs

Particles moving with no acceleration (constant velocity) have graphs of position vs time with one slope. The velocity is not changing since the slope is constant.

Position vs time graphs for particles moving with constant acceleration look parabolic. The instantaneous slope is changing. In this graph it is increasing, and the particle is speeding up.

Page 45: Motion in one direction

Uniformly Accelerating Objects

You see the car move faster and faster. This is a form of acceleration.

The position vs time graph for the accelerating car reflects the bigger and bigger x values.

The velocity vs time graph reflects the increasing velocity.

Page 46: Motion in one direction

Describe the motion

This object is moving in the positive direction and accelerating in the positive direction (speeding up).

This object is moving in the negative direction and accelerating in the negative direction (speeding up).

This object is moving in the negative direction and accelerating in the positive direction (slowing down).

Page 47: Motion in one direction

Draw Graphs forStationary Particles

x

t

Positionvs

time

v

t

Velocityvs

time

a

t

Accelerationvs

time

Page 48: Motion in one direction

Draw Graphs forConstant Non-zero Velocity

x

t

Positionvs

time

v

t

Velocityvs

time

a

t

Accelerationvs

time

Page 49: Motion in one direction

Draw Graphs for ConstantNon-zero Acceleration

x

t

Positionvs

time

v

t

Velocityvs

time

a

t

Accelerationvs

time

Page 50: Motion in one direction

Kinematic Equations

212

2 20 2 ( )

o

o o

v v at

x x v t at

v v a x

Page 51: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: What must a particular Olympic sprinter’s acceleration be if he is able to attain his maximum speed in ½ of a second?

Page 52: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: A plane is flying in a northwest direction when it lands, touching the end of the runway with a speed of 130 m/s. If the runway is 1.0 km long, what must the acceleration of the plane be if it is to stop while leaving ¼ of the runway remaining as a safety margin?

Page 53: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: On a ride called the Detonator at Worlds of Fun in Kansas City, passengers accelerate straight downward from 0 to 20 m/s in 1.0 second.

a) What is the average acceleration of the passengers on this ride?

b) How fast would they be going if they accelerated for an additional second at this rate?

Page 54: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem -- continued

c) Sketch approximate x-vs-t, v-vs-t and a-vs-t graphs for this ride.

Page 55: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: Air bags are designed to deploy in 10 ms. Estimate the acceleration of the front surface of the bag as it expands. Express your answer in terms of the acceleration of gravity g.

Page 56: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: You are driving through town at 12.0 m/s when suddenly a ball rolls out in front of you. You apply the brakes and decelerate at 3.5 m/s2.a) How far do you travel before stopping?

b) When you have traveled only half the stopping distance, what is your speed?

Page 57: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem -- continuedc) How long does it take you to stop?

d) Draw x vs t, v vs t, and a vs t graphs for this.

Page 58: Motion in one direction

Friday, August 28, 2009

Free Fall4

Page 59: Motion in one direction

Free Fall

Free fall is a term we use to indicate that an object is falling under the influence of gravity, with gravity being the only force on the object.

Gravity accelerates the object toward the earth the entire time it rises, and the entire time it falls.

The acceleration due to gravity near the surface of the earth has a magnitude of 9.8 m/s2. The direction of this acceleration is DOWN.

Air resistance is ignored.

Page 60: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: You drop a ball from rest off a 120 m high cliff. Assuming air resistance is negligible,

a) how long is the ball in the air?

b) what is the ball’s speed and velocity when it strikes the ground at the base of the cliff?

c) sketch approximate x-vs-t, v-vs-t, a-vs-t graphs for this situation.

Page 61: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem: You throw a ball straight upward into the air with a velocity of 20.0 m/s, and you catch the ball some time later.a) How long is the ball in the air?

b) How high does the ball go?

Page 62: Motion in one direction

Practice Problem -- continuedc) What is the ball’s velocity when you catch it?

d) Sketch approximate x-vs-t, v-vs-t, a-vs-t graphs for this situation.

Page 63: Motion in one direction

Symmetry in Free Fall

When something is thrown straight upward under the influence of gravity, and then returns to the thrower, this is very symmetric.

The object spends half its time traveling up; half traveling down.

Velocity when it returns to the ground is the opposite of the velocity it was thrown upward with.

Acceleration is 9.8 m/s2 and directed DOWN the entire time the object is in the air!

Let’s see some demos!

Page 64: Motion in one direction

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Free Fall II

Page 65: Motion in one direction

Reflex Testing Lab

Using a meter stick, determine your reaction time.

Page 66: Motion in one direction

Pinewood Derby

x(m) 0 2.3 9.2 20.7 36.8 57.5

t(s) 0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0

On your graph paper, do the following.a) Draw a position vs time graph for the car.b) Draw tangent lines at three different points on the curve to determine the instantaneous velocity at all three points.c) On a separate graph, draw a velocity vs time graph using the instantaneous velocities you obtained in the step above.d)From your velocity vs time graph, determine the acceleration of the car.

Page 67: Motion in one direction

2-8 Graphical Analysis of Linear Motion

This is a graph of x vs. t for an object moving with constant velocity. The velocity is the slope of the x-t curve.

Page 68: Motion in one direction

2-8 Graphical Analysis of Linear Motion

On the left we have a graph of velocity vs. time for an object with varying velocity; on the right we have the resulting x vs. t curve. The instantaneous velocity is tangent to the curve at each point.

Page 69: Motion in one direction

2-8 Graphical Analysis of Linear Motion

The displacement, x, is the area beneath the v vs. t curve.