Title: Lecture 1: Introduction Motion in 1D
1Lecture 1IntroductionMotion in 1-D
- Phys 2101
- Gabriela González
2The basics about the course
Instructor Gabriela González (www.phys.lsu.edu/fa
culty/gonzalez/) Office hours MF 2-3pm, 271-C
Nicholson Hall Course website
www.phys.lsu.edu/classes/spring2008/phys2101/ Text
bookFundamentals of Physics, Halliday, Resnick,
and Walker, 8th ed., 2001 (LSU custom edition is
cheaper, and has WebAssign code) Homework
www.webassign.net/login.html Grades 1
initial exam (next week!)x 50 3
hour exams x 100
final exam x 200
homework x 100 600
A 85-100 B 75-85 C 60-75
D 50-60 F lt50
3Motion in one dimension
- Position is a function of time x(t)
- Velocity is also a function of time, defined as
- Acceleration is defined as
4Constant 1-D acceleration
the only formulas you need!
5Motion in one dimension
- The diagram shows the position of a cross-country
skier at various times. At each of the indicated
times, the skier turns around and reverses the
direction of travel the skier moves from A to B
to C to D. - What is the average speed and the average
velocity of the skier between t0 and t1, 2 and
3min? - Plot the skiers position, velocity and
acceleration as a function of time.
6Constant acceleration
- A model rocket fired vertically from the ground
ascends with a constant vertical acceleration of
5 m/s2 for 6 s. Its fuel is then exhausted, so
it continues upward as a free-fall particle and
then falls back. Assume g10 m/s2. - Plot the acceleration, velocity and position as a
function of time. - What is the maximum altitude reached?
- What is the total time elapsed from take off
until the rocket strikes the ground?