Motion in One Dimension

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Motion in One Dimension

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Motion in One Dimension. Displacement. A change in an object’s position: Δx = x f – x i This is a vector quantity Units: m How is displacement different from distance?. Average Velocity and Average Speed. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Motion in One Dimension

Page 1: Motion in One Dimension

Motion in One Dimension

Page 2: Motion in One Dimension

Displacement

A change in an object’s position: Δx = xf – xi

This is a vector quantity Units: m

How is displacement different from distance?

Page 3: Motion in One Dimension

Average Velocity and Average Speed

v x =Δx

Δt

S =total d

Δt

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Average Velocity from a Graph

t

x

A

B

x

t

vavg =Δx

Δt

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Average Velocity from a Graph

t

xA

Bxt

vavg =Δx

Δt

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Average Acceleration

ax =ΔvxΔt=vxf − vxit f − ti

ax =Δ(Δx)

Δt

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Average Acceleration from a Graph

t

v

A

B

x

t

aavg =Δv

Δt

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t

x

Remember that the average velocity between the time at A and the time at B is the slope of the connecting line.

A

B

Instantaneous Velocity and Speed

Average Velocity from a graph

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t

xA

B

What happens if A and B become closer to each other?

Instantaneous Velocity and Speed

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Instantaneous Velocity and Speed

t

x

AB

What happens if A and B become closer to each other?

Page 11: Motion in One Dimension

Instantaneous Velocity and Speed

t

x

AB

What happens if A and B become closer to each other?

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Instantaneous Velocity and Speed

t

x

A

B

What happens if A and B become closer to each other?

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Instantaneous Velocity and Speed

t

x

A

B

The line “connecting” A and B is a tangent line to the curve. The velocity at that instant of time is represented by the slope of this tangent line.

A and B are effectively the same point. The time difference is effectively zero.

Page 14: Motion in One Dimension

Remember that a limit is used to define a derivative by:

f '(x) = limΔx→0

f (x + Δx) − f (x)

Δx

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Instantaneous Velocity and Speed

Instantaneous velocity is the limiting value of Δx/Δt as Δt approaches zero, or the derivative of x with respect to t:

The instantaneous speed of an object is the magnitude of its velocity €

vx = limΔt→0

Δx

Δt=dx

dt

Page 16: Motion in One Dimension

Average and Instantaneous Acceleration

t

v

Average acceleration is represented by the slope of a line connecting two points on a v/t graph.

Instantaneous acceleration is represented by the slope of a tangent to the curve on a v/t graph.A

B

C

Page 17: Motion in One Dimension

Instantaneous Acceleration

Instantaneous acceleration is the limiting value of Δv/Δt as Δt approaches zero, or the derivative of v with respect to t:

ax = limΔt→0

Δv

Δt=dv

dt

Acceleration can also be referred to as the second derivative of position with respect to time.

Just don’t let the new notation scare you; think of the d as a baby Δ, indicating a very tiny change!

ax =dv

dt=d2x

dt=Δ(Δx)

Δt

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Now YOU try it!

Try these phun problems using the calculus

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Derivatives: the graphical representation

Look closely at each of these graphs (all of which are for the same motion) x vs t, v vs t, and a vs t

Remember that derivatives have to do with slope (over an increasingly small interval)

Analyze each time interval and see if you can understand how these graphs are connected

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Now YOU try it!

Using your knowledge of how position, velocity, and acceleration are connected, analyze and plot the following graphs

Page 24: Motion in One Dimension

Draw representative graphs for a particle which is stationary.

x

t

Positionvs

time

v

t

Velocityvs

time

a

t

Accelerationvs

time

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Draw representative graphs for a particle which has constant non-zero

velocity.

x

t

Positionvs

time

v

t

Velocityvs

time

a

t

Accelerationvs

time

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x

t

Positionvs

time

v

t

Velocityvs

time

a

t

Accelerationvs

time

Draw representative graphs for a particle which has constant non-zero

acceleration.

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Given this graph of position vs time, plot the corresponding v vs t and a vs t graphs

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Given this graph of velocity vs time, plot the corresponding x vs t and a vs t graphs