Title: One Dimensional Motion
1One Dimensional Motion
- Distance and Displacement
- Speed and Velocity
- Graphing Speed/Velocity
- Acceleration
- Free Fall
2Question of the Day
- Match each unit on the right with the type of
measurement with which it would most likely be
used. - 1. Diameter of a Hydrogen atom a. Light-year
- 2. Distance from the Sun to Earth b. nanometer
- 3. Wavelength of a photon of visible light c.
angstrom - 4. Distance from our sun to the nearest star d.
micron - 5. Diameter of a red blood cell e.
Astronomical unit -
3The Answers..
4Choosing a Frame of Reference
- Before describing the motion of an object, you
need to have a frame of reference. - A frame of reference is a system of objects that
are not moving relative (compared) to one
another. - The earth is a common frame of reference.
5Motion
- Motion is the change in the position of an
object. - When this change is compared to another object,
it is called relative motion. The reference
object can be either at rest or in motion. - Linear motion is motion in a straight line.
6Measuring Distance
- Distance is the length of a path between two
points. - When an object moves in a straight line, the
distance is the length of the line connecting the
objects starting and ending points. - Example Walk 5 meters, then walk 10 meters.
7Measuring Displacements
- Displacement is the direction from the starting
point and the length of the straight line from
the starting point to the ending point. - Displacement is distance with a specific
direction. - Example Walk 5 miles north, then walk 10 miles
southeast. - See an example of distance vs. displacement
8Distance vs. Displacement
9Combining Displacements
- Displacements are added using vectors.
- A vector is a measurement that has a magnitude
(number) and a direction. - When two things occur in the same direction, the
vectors add. - When they act in opposite directions, they
subtract. - When added (or subtracted), the sum (or
difference) is called the resultant vector.
10Combining Displacements
Start
5 m
10 m
7 m
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11Question of the dayQuiz (10 pts)
- Please place all answers on a separate sheet of
paper. - 1. A student walks 3 blocks from his home to
school, walks home for lunch, and then returns to
school. What is (a) the total distance he
walked, and (b) his overall displacement. - 2. To get to a friends house, you make the
following trip 5 blocks north, 7 blocks west,
and 5 blocks south. (A) What distance did you
travel? (B) how far away is your friends
house?include distance AND direction!
12Speed
- Speed can be defined in a couple of ways
- How fast something is moving
- The distance covered in a certain amount of time
- The rate of change of the position of an object
- Units for speed are miles / hour (mi/hr)
- kilometers / hour (km/hr)
- feet / second (ft/s)
- This is the standard unit meters / second (m/s)
13Average and Instantaneous Speed
- Instantaneous Speed is the speed at any instant
in time.
total distance covered time to travel that
distance
Average Speed
14During a typical trip to school, your car will
undergo a series of changes in its speed. If you
were to inspect the speedometer readings at
regular intervals, you would notice that it
changes often. The speedometer of a car reveals
information about the instantaneous speed of your
car that is, it shows your speed at a particular
instant in time.
15For each use of velocity described below,
identify whether it is instantaneous velocity or
average velocity.
- The speedometer on your car indicates you are
going 65 mph - A race-car driver was listed as driving 120 mph
for the entire race. - A freely falling object has a speed of 19.6 m/s
after 2 seconds of fall in a vacuum. - The speed limit sign says 45 mph.
16Calculating Speed
17d
t
V
18Example
- Sound travels at a speed of 330 m/s. If a
firecracker explodes 3630 m away from you, how
long does it take for the sound of the explosion
to reach you? - Speed, v 330 m/s distance, d 3630 m time, t
? - So it takes 11 seconds for the sound of the
explosion to reach you.
19Velocity
- Velocity is speed in a particular direction.
- 60 m/s north
- Constant Velocity does not change in speed or
direction. - Changing velocity can be a change in speed,
direction, or both. Whenever there is a change
in the velocity of an object, that object is said
to be accelerating.
20Question of the DayVelocity Quiz
- If you are driving at 25 m/s and look out the
window for 2.5 seconds, what distance have you
traveled while looking out the window? (4 pts) - To get from the gym to class, you walk a distance
of 135 meters. If you walk at a speed of .65
m/s, will you get to class in 4 minutes? (6 pts)
21Graphing Speed or Velocity
- When constructing a graph of speed or velocity,
distance is plotted on the vertical, or y-axis,
and time is plotted on the horizontal, or x-axis. - The speed of an object can be found from the
graph by calculating the slope of the line.
22Constant Speed Graph
- A distance-time graph for constant speed is a
straight line.
How far did the person walk in 11 seconds? What
is her average speed? What is her instantaneous
speed at 8 seconds?
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24Variable Speed Graph
How far did the person walk in 5 seconds? What is
her average speed? What is her instantaneous
speed at 5.5 seconds? At 7 seconds? When is she
walking faster - from 0-4 seconds or from 6-8
seconds?
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26Question of the Day.Quiz (10 pts)
- A car travels 1200 m in 2 minutes. What is its
average velocity in m/s? (3 pts) - A sprinter runs 10 m in 30 seconds, then speeds
up to 1 m/s for 1 minute. - a) What is her average speed for the whole trip?
(2 pts) - b) What is her instantaneous speed at 45 sec? (2
pts) - c) Make a distance vs. time graph for this
example (3 pts)
27Question of the DayAcceleration
- Write each of the following in your notebook.
Circle each situation described below in which
the object has an acceleration. For each one you
circle, identify the direction in which the
acceleration is acting. - A car moves to the right while slowing down.
- A marble moves in a circular path inside a paper
plate at a constant speed. - The moon orbits the Earth.
- An air hockey puck moves smoothly across the air
hockey table after being struck. - A rocket is launched upward from the launch pad.
28Answers.
- yes, this is deceleration.
- Yes, this is centripetal acceleration
- Yes, also centripetal acceleration
- No, this is constant velocity
- Yes, this is acceleration
29Acceleration
- Acceleration is the rate at which velocity
changes. - Any time velocity changes, an object is
undergoing an acceleration. - A decrease in velocity is called deceleration.
- This change can be by speeding up, slowing down,
or changing direction.
30Acceleration
- Units of acceleration are
- (miles / hour) / second mph/s
- (kilometers / hour) / second kmh/s
- (feet / second) / second ft/s2
- This is the standard unit (meters / second) /
second m/s2 - Acceleration along the ground is horizontal
acceleration. - Vertical acceleration is called free fall.
31Calculating Acceleration
32Example
- A cars velocity at the top of a hill is 10 m/s.
Two seconds later it reaches the bottom of the
hill with a velocity of 26 m/s. What is the
acceleration of the car?
The car is increasing its velocity by 8 m/s for
every second it is moving.
33Graphing Acceleration
- A velocity vs. time graph is used to find
acceleration.
What is the final velocity of the car? What is
the instantaneous velocity of the car at 3
seconds? What is the acceleration of the car?
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36Free Fall
- The acceleration of a falling object is due to
the force of gravity between the object and the
earth. - Galileo showed that falling objects accelerate
equally, neglecting air resistance. - On the surface of the earth, in a vacuum, all
objects accelerate towards the surface of the
earth at 9.8 m/s2. This value is called g.
37Effect of Gravity on an Object
38Without Air resistance With Air resistance
39Gravity and an Accelerating Object
- Since the acceleration of gravity is 9.8 m/s2, an
object increases (or decreases) its velocity by
9.8 m/s each second.
What is the speed of the object after 3 seconds?
After 5 seconds? What is the acceleration of the
dropped object after 2 seconds? After 6
seconds? How would this graph change if the
object were thrown up into the air?
40Question of the DayQuiz (10 pts)
Complete the table below by drawing arrows to
indicate the directions of the objects velocity
and acceleration (remember its not always up and
down).