Motion Graphs
Motion Graphs
Case Study #1
Imagine you are standing by the side of the road.
An automobile approaches you from behind,
traveling at a constant speed.
Then the car passes you,
disappearing off into the
distance.
To graph the motion
of this car, you will
need some data.
time (s)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
displacement (m)
-30
-20
-10
0
10
20
30
Slope of Graph
The slope of a displacement vs. time graph tells us the
object's velocity.
In this case, the
line is straight,
meaning that the
slope (and hence,
the velocity)
remains constant
for this
automobile.
rise
run
Slope as Velocity
In this particular example, we have put time (t) on the
horizontal axis and displacement (x) on the vertical axis.
(5.0, 20)
Rise = x
(1.0, -20)
Run = t
Case Study #2
Here's a graph that describes the motion of another car you
see while standing along the side of the road.
Can you describe in
words the motion of
this car?
Case Study #2
If you said that this car approached you from in front,
and then passed on by you, you were correct!
It is also true that
this car is
traveling at a
constant velocity
(the graph line is
straight.)
But is it the
same constant
velocity the last
car had?
(0, 30)
(5.0, -15)
Positive slope
(car #1)
Negative slope
(car #2)
Car 2
For Car 2
Case Study #4
A black car is traveling along the highway at constant velocity.
A blue car follows along behind it, at the same velocity.
The black car pulls to
the side of the road
and stops. The blue
car pulls up behind it
and also stops.
First, we look at the
data table that
describes their
motion, then we'll
graph it.
time (s)
0
1
2
3
3.5
4
5
Displacement Displacement
black car (m) blue car (m)
0
-10
10
0
20
10
30
20
30
25
30
25
30
25
Case Study #4
Case Study #5
An object slides down a ramp, picking up speed as it goes.
We can figure
out how fast
the object was
going by
calculating the
slope, but,
depending
upon which
instant in time
we pick, we
will get a
different
answer.
run
(2.0, 3)
Warning!
Do not use the
coordinates of
the nearby
points on the
curved graph
line.
(4.0, 15)
x
(2.0, 3)
(6.0, 35)
(4.0, 15)
(6.0, 35)
(4.0, 15)
Case Study #6
Imagine you're standing at the top of a ramp. Your friend
rolls a ball up the ramp toward you. The following graph
describes the motion of the ball.
For additional practice, try finding
the velocity of the ball at several
different instants in time through
slope calculation.
By the way: the ramp is
straight, not curved.
This is a graph of the
ball's motion, not a
picture of the ramp!
rise
run
Slope as Acceleration
Our slope equation now becomes:
(first quadrant)
Velocity is +
(first quadrant)
Acceleration is +
Acceleration is
(positive slope)
(negative slope)
Object speeding up
t
t
Velocity is
(fourth quadrant)
Acceleration is
(negative slope)
Velocity is
(fourth quadrant)
Acceleration is +
(positive slope)
Case Study #7
A bus has finished loading passengers, the door closes,
and it accelerates away from the curb.
Since the graph
line is straight, the
bus has a constant
acceleration.
The value of the
bus's acceleration
can be calculated
from the slope of
the graph.
(5.0, 25)
v
(1.0, 5)
(5.0, 25)
v
(1.0, 5)
height
A=bh
x = a t
x t
3
4
Case Study #8
A policeman waits by the side of the road with a radar unit.
At the instant a speeding car passes by, the police car
begins to accelerate from rest in an effort to catch up to the
speeder and pull him over.
Here's the data:
time (s)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
speeder's
cops's
velocity (m/s) velocity (m/s)
30
0
30
10
30
20
30
30
30
40
30
40
30
40
30
40
Question:
At what time does the
policeman catch up
with the speeder?
Case Study #9
You throw a ball straight up in the air; it comes back down
and you catch it. Here are the graphs that describe the
motion of the ball.
Velocities
are
negative
when the
ball is
falling.
v
The slope of the graph is the ball's
acceleration.
At t = 3 s, the
slope of the graph
is zero, because
the ball is
motionless at its
highest point.
At t = 5 s, the slope of
the graph (ball's
velocity) is 19.6 m/s.
The ball is on its way
back down.