Lecture 3. (sections )

Similar documents
HW Chapter 3 Q 14,15 P 2,7,812,18,24,25. Chapter 3. Motion in the Universe. Dr. Armen Kocharian

Chapter 2. Motion in One Dimension. Professor Wa el Salah

Chapter 2. Motion in One Dimension

Physics 101 Lecture 3 Motion in 1D Dr. Ali ÖVGÜN

Lecture PowerPoints. Chapter 2 Physics for Scientists and Engineers, with Modern Physics, 4 th Edition Giancoli

II. Motion in 1D. Physics Part 1 MECHANICS Draft (part C incomplete) 1. Aristotle s Physics. A. Principle of Inertia. 2. Inertia

Interactive Engagement via Thumbs Up. Today s class. Next class. Chapter 2: Motion in 1D Example 2.10 and 2.11 Any Question.

Physics Fall Mechanics, Thermodynamics, Waves, Fluids. Recap: Position and displacement

12/06/2010. Chapter 2 Describing Motion: Kinematics in One Dimension. 2-1 Reference Frames and Displacement. 2-1 Reference Frames and Displacement

Motion along a straight line. Physics 11a. 4 Basic Quantities in Kinematics. Motion

Chapter 3 Acceleration

Lecture 5. (sections )

Chapter 8 : Motion. KEY CONCEPTS [ *rating as per the significance of concept ]

Lecture 2. 1D motion with Constant Acceleration. Vertical Motion.

Physic 231 Lecture 3. Main points of today s lecture. for constant acceleration: a = a; assuming also t0. v = lim

Chapter 3 Lecture. Pearson Physics. Acceleration and Accelerated Motion. Prepared by Chris Chiaverina Pearson Education, Inc.

Chapter 2. Motion in One Dimension

Derivation of Kinematic Equations. View this after Motion on an Incline Lab

Distance vs. Displacement, Speed vs Velocity, Velocity vs Acceleration

Chapter 2. Kinematics in one dimension

Sierzega: Kinematics 10 Page 1 of 14

Chapter 2. Kinematics in One Dimension. continued

Chapter 2 Describing Motion: Kinematics in One Dimension

Lecture 2. 1D motion with Constant Acceleration. Vertical Motion.

Some Motion Terms. Distance & Displacement Velocity & Speed Acceleration Uniform motion Scalar.vs. vector

Chapter 3 Acceleration

Reminder: Acceleration

Chapter 3 Acceleration

Physics 1120: 1D Kinematics Solutions

PUM Physics II - Kinematics Lesson 12 Solutions Page 1 of 16

Calculus Review. v = x t

What is a Vector? A vector is a mathematical object which describes magnitude and direction

Chapter 1 Problem 28: Agenda. Quantities in Motion. Displacement Isn t Distance. Velocity. Speed 1/23/14

Chapter 2. Motion along a straight line

CHAPTER 2 DESCRIBING MOTION: KINEMATICS IN ONE DIMENSION

Chapter 4. Motion in Two Dimensions. Professor Wa el Salah

Assumed the acceleration was constant and that the receiver could be modeled as a point particle.

Chapter 2. Motion in One Dimension. AIT AP Physics C

Lecture Notes Kinematics Recap 2.4 Acceleration

Chapter 2: 1D Kinematics

Lecture PowerPoints. Chapter 2 Physics: Principles with Applications, 6 th edition Giancoli

Conceptual Physics 11 th Edition

Chapter 2. Motion along a straight line. We find moving objects all around us. The study of motion is called kinematics.

Chapter 2. Motion along a straight line

1 D motion: know your variables, position, displacement, velocity, speed acceleration, average and instantaneous.

Kinematics II Mathematical Analysis of Motion

General Physics (PHY 170) Chap 2. Acceleration motion with constant acceleration. Tuesday, January 15, 13

Linear Motion. By Jack, Cole, Kate and Linus

Trigonometry I. Pythagorean theorem: WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY Physics

Lecture PowerPoints. Chapter 2 Physics: Principles with Applications, 7 th edition Giancoli

Welcome back to Physics 211

13.7 Power Applied by a Constant Force

Welcome back to Physics 211

Kinematics. Chapter 2. Position-Time Graph. Position

acceleration versus time. LO Determine a particle s change in position by graphical integration on a graph of velocity versus time.

Chapter 2 Describing Motion: Kinematics in One Dimension

Acceleration. 3. Changing Direction occurs when the velocity and acceleration are neither parallel nor anti-parallel

Chapter 4. Motion in Two Dimensions

Displacement, Velocity, and Acceleration AP style

A. VOCABULARY REVIEWS On the line, write the term that correctly completes each statement. Use each term once.

Introduction to 1-D Motion Distance versus Displacement

Module 4: One-Dimensional Kinematics

Chapter 2. Kinematic Equations. Problem 1. Kinematic Equations, specific. Motion in One Dimension

Would you risk your live driving drunk? Intro

Conceptual Physical Science

Motion Along a Straight Line (Motion in One-Dimension)

Physics I Exam 1 Fall 2014 (version A)

Chapter 4. Motion in Two Dimensions. Position and Displacement. General Motion Ideas. Motion in Two Dimensions

Topic 1: 1D Motion PHYSICS 231

2. To study circular motion, two students use the hand-held device shown above, which consists of a rod on which a spring scale is attached.


Physics 101 Prof. Ekey. Chapter 2

Chapter 2 Motion Along A Straight Line

Kinematics II Mathematical Analysis of Motion

Physics 111. = v i. v f. + v i. = x i. (Δt) + 1. x f. Keq - graphs. Keq - graphs. Δt t f. t i

Chapter 2: Motion in One Dimension

INTRODUCTION AND KINEMATICS. Physics Unit 1 Chapters 1-3

Unit 1 Parent Guide: Kinematics

Kinematics Multiple- Choice Questions (answers on page 16)

PS 11 GeneralPhysics I for the Life Sciences

Jan 31 8:19 PM. Chapter 9: Uniform Rectilinear Motion

changes acceleration vector

Chapter 4. Motion in Two Dimensions

Chapter 2 One-Dimensional Kinematics. Copyright 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Motion with Changing Speed

Speed how fast an object is moving (also, the magnitude of the velocity) scalar

DESCRIBING MOTION: KINEMATICS IN ONE DIMENSION. AP Physics Section 2-1 Reference Frames and Displacement

Kinematics. 1. Introduction to Kinematics. 2. Position and displacement

ISSUED BY K V - DOWNLOADED FROM KINEMATICS

Test Wed, Feb 8 th 7pm, G20 MING HSIEH Bring your calculator and #2 pencil with a good eraser! 20 Multiple choice questions from:

Chapter 4. Motion in Two Dimensions

Kinematics Multiple-Choice Questions

Chapter 3. Accelerated Motion

Chapter 2: Kinematics

Chapter 3 Kinematics in Two Dimensions; Vectors

Motion Along a Straight Line

QuickCheck. A cart slows down while moving away from the origin. What do the position and velocity graphs look like? Slide 2-65

Chapter 2. Kinematics in One Dimension

INTRODUCTION. 1. One-Dimensional Kinematics

Physics 2A. Lecture 2A. "You must learn from the mistakes of others. You can't possibly live long enough to make them all yourself.

Transcription:

Lecture 3 PHYSICS 201 (sections 521-525) Instructor: Hans Schuessler Temporary: Alexandre e Kolomenski o http://sibor.physics.tamu.edu/teaching/phys201/

Average velocity v Δx Δt

Instantaneous velocity v Δx lim when Δt 0 Δt

Average Velocity (example) x (meters) 6 4 2 0-2 1 2 3 4 t (seconds) What is the average velocity over the first 4 seconds? A) -2 m/s B) 4 m/s C) 1 m/s D) not enough information to decide.

Instantaneous Velocity x (meters) 6 4 2-2 1 2 3 4 t (seconds) What is the instantaneous velocity at the fourth second? A) 4 m/s B) 0 m/s C) 1 m/s D) not enough information to decide.

Acceleration We say that things which have changing velocity are accelerating Acceleration is the Rate of change of velocity You hit the accelerator (what about break?) in your car to speed up (Ok It s true you also hit it to stay at constant velocity, but that s because friction is slowing you down we ll get to that later )

Average acceleration a Δv Δt Unit of acceleration: (m/s)/s=m/s 2 Meters per second squared

Acceleration

KINEMATICS IN ONE DIMENSION Equations of Kinematics for Constant Acceleration A position of an object is a function of time x x(t) Average velocity v Average acceleration x t t a x 0 0 v t We can always select the reference frame in such a way that, v t 0 0 t 0 and x x ( t 0) 0, then 0 0 0 Average acceleration v x t

Kinematics atcs in one dimension so (cont.) Motion with constant acceleration. From the formula Average acceleration v v t a 0 We find v v 0 at On the other hand Average velocity v x t 1 1 v ( v0 v) ( v0 ( v0 at)) v0 2 2 1 at 2 Then we can find x v t x 0 1 1 ( v 0 at ) t x 0 v 0t at 2 2 2 How to directly relate x, v and a?

Units SI Displacement, distance: 1 meter 1m Velocity, speed: 1 meter/second 1m/s (speed is the magnitude of velocity-scalar!) Acceleration: 1 meter/second 2 1m/s 2

Velocity for motion with positive acceleration

Velocity for motion with negative acceleration

Graphing motion with velocity constant on time intervals

Position, Velocity and Acceleration Displacement, Velocity and Acceleration are all related If velocity is constant, then the acceleration is 0 and the displacement is changing linearly with time. If acceleration is constant, then the velocity is changing linearly and the displacement is a quadratic function of time (parabola or parabolic dependence).

Qualitative graphical analysis x v t For x(t) the slope is increasing then decreasing (this slope is proportional to velocity, Therefore we can draw approximate graph hfor the velocity ) a t t For v(t) the slope is related to acceleration. (we can see that the acceleration is positive, then goes through zero, and then becomes negative).

Example of graphic solution: Catching a speeder Speeder - with constant velocity Police car - with acceleration

Examples Can a car have uniform speed and non-constant velocity? Can an object have a positive average velocity over the last hour, and a negative instantaneous velocity?

Conceptual Example If the velocity of an object is zero, does it mean that the acceleration is zero? If the acceleration is zero, does that t mean that t the velocity is zero?

Galileo Galilei A paradox is a friend of a genius WHO WAS GALILEO? Galileo was an Italian physicist and astronomer credited with building the first effective telescope. He used this to prove that the earth moves round the sun. This confirmed the theory originally put forward by the Polish astronomer Nicholas Copernicus. But it went directly against the teachings of the Church i.e; the earth was the centre of the Universe and the Sun revolved round the Earth. It was this conflict with the teachings of the Church that was to eventually bring Galileo to the attention of the Inquisition Experiments on the motion of objects falling under the action of the force of gravity LEANING TOWER of PISA Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) Years Built: 1173-1350 Height: 55.863 meters (185 feet). 8 stories. Lean: 5.2 meters (1997)

Testing Kinematics for a=9.80m/s 2

Objects in the field of gravity. All objects fall with the same constant acceleration, when air resistance is negligible!!!

1-D motions in the gravitational field

Thanks for your attention!