Title: Two-Dimensional Motion and Vectors
1CHAPTER 3
Two-Dimensional Motion and Vectors
2VECTOR quantities
Vectors have magnitude and direction.
Representations
(x, y)
(r, q)
Other vectors velocity, acceleration, momentum,
force
3Vector Addition/Subtraction
- 2nd vector begins at end of first vector
- Order doesnt matter
Vector addition
A B can be interpreted as A(-B)
4Vector Components
- Cartesian components are projections along the x-
and y-axes
Going backwards,
5Example 3.1
a) F b) F c) T
6Example 3.2
Alice and Bob carry a bottle of wine to a picnic
site. Alice carries the bottle 5 miles due east,
and Bob carries the bottle 10 miles traveling 30
degrees north of east. Carol, who is bringing the
glasses, takes a short cut which goes directly to
the picnic site. How far did Carol walk? What
was Carols direction?
14.55 miles, at 20.10 degrees
7Arcsin, Arccos and Arctan Watch out!
samecosine
sametangent
same sine
Arcsin, Arccos and Arctan functions can yield
wrong angles if x or y are negative.
82-dim Motion Velocity
Graphically,
9Multiplying/Dividing Vectors by Scalars, e.g. Dr
/ Dt
- Vector multiplied/divided by scalar is a vector
- Magnitude of new vector is magnitudeo the
orginial vector multiplied/divided by the
scalar - Direction of new vector is the same or opposite
to original vector
10Principles of 2-d Motion
- X- and Y-motion are independent
- Can be treated as two separate 1-d problems
- To get trajectory (x vs. y)
- Solve for x(t) and y(t)
- Invert one Eq. to get t(x)
- Insert t(x) into y(t) to get y(x)
11Projectile Motion
- X-motion is at constant velocity ax0,
vxconstant - Y-motion is at constant accelerationay-g
- Note we have ignored
- air resistance
- rotation of earth (Coriolis force)
12Projectile Motion
Acceleration is constant
13Pop and Drop Demo
14The Ballistic Cart Demo
15Finding Trajectory, y(x)
16Example 3.3
v0
An airplane drops food to two starving hunters.
The plane is flying at an altitude of 100 m and
with a velocity of 40.0 m/s. How far ahead of
the hunters should the plane release the food?
h
X
181 m
17Example 3.4
- The Y-component of v at A is (lt0, 0, gt0)
- The Y-component of v at B is (lt0, 0, gt0)
- The Y-component of v at C is (lt0, 0, gt0)
- The total velocity is greatest at (A,B,C)
- The X-component of v is greatest at (A,B,C)
1.gt02. 03. lt04. A5. Equal at all points
18Range Formula
19Range Formula
20Example 3.5a
A softball leaves a bat with an initial velocity
of 31.33 m/s. What is the maximum distance one
could expect the ball to travel?
100 m
21Example 3.5b
A cannon aims a projectile at a target located on
a cliff 500 m away in the horizontal direction
and 75 meters above the cannon. The cannon is
pointed 50 degrees to the horizontal. What muzzle
velocity should the cannon employ to hit the
target?
75.4 m/s
22Example 3.7, Shoot the Monkey
A hunter is a distance L 40 m from a tree in
which a monkey is perched a height h20 m above
the hunter. The hunter shoots an arrow at the
monkey. However, this is a smart monkey who lets
go of the branch the instant he sees the hunter
release the arrow. The initial velocity of the
arrow is v 50 m/s.
A. If the arrow traveled with infinite speed on a
straight line trajectory, at what angle should
the hunter aim the arrow relative to the ground?
qArctan(h/L)25.6?
B. Considering the effects of gravity, at what
angle should the hunter aim the arrow relative to
the ground?
23Solution
Must find v0,y/vx in terms of h and L
24Shoot the Monkey Demo
25Relative velocity
- Velocity always defined relative to reference
frame.All velocities are relative - Relative velocities are calculated by vector
addition/subtraction. - Acceleration is independent of reference frame
- For high, v c, rules are more complicated
(Einstein)
26Example 3.8
A plane that is capable of traveling 200 m.p.h.
flies 100 miles into a 50 m.p.h. wind, then flies
back with a 50 m.p.h. tail wind. How long does
the trip take? What is the average speed of the
plane for thetrip?
1.067 hours 1 hr. and 4 minutes 187.4 mph
27Relative velocity in 2-d
- Sum velocities as vectors
- velocity relative to ground velocity relative
to medium velocity of medium.
vbe vbr vre
282 Cases
pointed perpendicularto stream
travels perpendicularto stream
29Example 3.9
An airplane capable of moving 200 mph in still
air. The plane points directly east, but a 50
mph wind from the north distorts his
course. What is the resulting ground speed? What
direction does the plane fly relative to the
ground?
206.2 mph 14.0 deg. south of east
30Example 3.10
An airplane capable of moving 200 mph in still
air. A wind blows directly from the North at 50
mph. If the airplane accounts for the wind (by
pointing the plane somewhat into the wind) and
flies directly east relative to the ground.
What is his resulting ground speed? In what
direction is the nose of the plane pointed?
193.6 mph 14.5 deg. north of east