1 / 24

Accelerated Motion

Accelerated Motion. Changing motion. You can feel the difference between uniform and nonuniform motion When motion changes, you feel a push or pull (a force). Ex: a Marta train coming to a sudden stop In uniform motion, your body becomes used to it. Ex: sitting in a car on cruise control.

Download Presentation

Accelerated Motion

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Accelerated Motion

  2. Changing motion • You can feel the difference between uniform and nonuniform motion • When motion changes, you feel a push or pull (a force). • Ex: a Marta train coming to a sudden stop • In uniform motion, your body becomes used to it. • Ex: sitting in a car on cruise control

  3. Acceleration • Whenever we change our state of motion, we are accelerating. • Acceleration is how quickly we are changing our velocity • Acceleration:the rate at which velocity is changing • SI unit: m/s2 or meters per second per second • Ex: speeding up, slowing down (negative acceleration), changing direction

  4. Check Your Understanding If a dog chases its tail in a circle at the same speed the whole time, is it accelerating? • Yes! Even though its speed is staying constant, it is changing direction, and therefore changing its velocity. If the velocity changes, it is accelerating.

  5. Equation:a = Δv / t = (vf – vi) / t • a = acceleration (m/s2) • Δv = change in velocity (m/s) • vf = final velocity (m/s) • vi = initial velocity (m/s) • t = time (s)

  6. Check Your Understanding Suppose a car moving in a straight line steadily increases its speed each second, first from 35 to 40 km/h, then from 40 to 45 km/h, then from 45 to 50 km/h. What is its acceleration? • We see that the speed increases by 5 km/h each second. The acceleration would be 5 km/h.s during each interval.

  7. Check Your Understanding In 5 seconds a car moving in a straight line increases its speed from 50 km/h to 65 km/h, while a truck goes from rest to 15 km/h in a straight line. What is the acceleration of each vehicle? • a = Δv / t acar = ? atruck = ? Δvcar=65–50=15 km/h Δvtruck=15-0=15 km/h t = 5s t = 5s acar = (15 km/h) / (5s) atruck = (15 km/h) / (5s) acar = 3 km/h.satruck = 3 km/h.s

  8. Check Your Understanding Which undergoes a greater acceleration? • Although the speeds are different, their rate of change of speed is the same…so both have the same acceleration.

  9. Elapsed Time Elapsed time: the time that has passed since the beginning of a fall • How long it takes something to fall • SI unit: seconds

  10. Velocity – Time Graphs • Velocity-Time graphs show the change of velocity over an elapsed time • AKA Speed-Time graphs • Remember that speed does NOT take into account direction • Time is always the independent variable • Velocity is always the dependent variable

  11. The slope of a Velocity-Time graph is equal to acceleration • Slope = rise/run • Slope = change in velocity / time • a = Δv / t • The steeper the slope, the faster the acceleration • Remember acceleration can be speeding up, slowing down, or sharp turns • A positive slope is speeding up and moving forward • A negative slope is EITHER slowing down OR moving in the opposite direction • A zero slope means that the velocity is NOT changing, meaning that the object is moving at the same speed in the same direction

  12. Check Your Understanding Which person(s) are not accelerating? • A and E. Their have a constant velocity. Which person(s) could be speeding up? • B and D. They are increasing velocity each second.

  13. Check Your Understanding Which person(s) could be slowing down? • Person C. They have a negative slope; they could be moving backwards too (there is not enough info on the graph to tell).

  14. Free Fall • Consider an apple falling from a tree. We know that it starts at rest and gains speed as it falls, or accelerates. • Gravity causes the apple to accelerate downward and is said to be in free fall. Free fall: when an object is only affected by gravity • SI unit: m/s2 ( for acceleration due to gravity) • Ex: g = 10 m/s2 on Earth. • The letter g represents the acceleration due to gravity.

  15. Equation:v = gt • v = velocity or speed (m/s) • g = acceleration due to gravity (10 m/s2 on Earth) • t = elapsed time (s) **Hint - as soon as you see any of the following phrases in a word problem, write g = 10 m/s2 for a given: free fall, falling, dropped, thrown**

  16. Check Your Understanding What would the speedometer reading on a falling rock be 4.5 seconds after it drops from rest? • v = ? g = 10 m/s2 t = 4.5s v = gt v = (10 m/s2) (4.5s) v = 45 m/s

  17. How about 8 seconds? • v = ? g = 10 m/s2 t = 8s v = gt v = (10 m/s2) (8s) v = 80 m/s How about 15 seconds? • v = ? g = 10 m/s2 t = 15s v = gt v = (10 m/s2) (15s) v = 150 m/s

  18. Now consider an object thrown straight up. It will continue to move straight up, then it comes back down. • At the highest point, the object changes its direction and the objects instantaneous speed is 0 m/s. • Whether the object is moving up or down, the acceleration of the object is always 10 m/s2.

  19. Because an object in free fall increases the rate of distance covered every second, we cannot use v =d/t. • Equation:d = ½ gt2 • d = distance (m) • g = acceleration due to gravity (10 m/s2 on Earth) • t = elapsed time (s)

  20. Check Your Understanding What is the distance an object falls in one second? • d = ? g = 10 m/s2 t = 1 s d = ½ gt2 d = ½ (10)(12) d = 5 m

  21. Air Resistance and Free Fall • All objects fall at 10 m/s2 on Earth • Regardless of weight or mass • Ex: In a vacuum, a feather and a bowling ball will hit the ground at the same time if dropped from the same hieght • A vacuum is anyway without any air (ex: outer space) • Air resistance causes objects such as a coin and a feather to accelerate differently. • However, air resistance less noticeably affects the motion of more massive objects like stones and baseballs. • With negligible air resistance, falling objects can be considered to be in free fall.

More Related