Lecture-2: Speed and Velocity
Lecture-2: Speed and Velocity
The instantaneous speed of an object is not to be confused with the average speed. Average speed is a
measure of the distance traveled in a given period of time; it is sometimes referred to as the distance per
time ratio. Suppose that during your trip to school, you traveled a distance of 5 miles and the trip lasted 0.2
hours (12 minutes). The average speed of your car could be determined as
On the average, your car was moving with a speed of 25 miles per hour. During your trip, there may have
been times that you were stopped and other times that your speedometer was reading 50 miles per hour.
Yet, on average, you were moving with a speed of 25 miles per hour.
Acceleration
Acceleration is a vector quantity that is defined as the rate at which an object changes its velocity. An
object is accelerating if it is changing its velocity.
Sports announcers will occasionally say that a person is accelerating if he/she is moving fast. Yet
acceleration has nothing to do with going fast. A person can be moving very fast and still not be
accelerating. Acceleration has to do with changing how fast an object is moving. If an object is not changing
its velocity, then the object is not accelerating. The data at the right are representative of a northwardmoving accelerating object. The velocity is changing over the course of time. In fact, the velocity is changing
by a constant amount - 10 m/s - in each second of time. Anytime an object's velocity is changing, the object
is said to be accelerating; it has an acceleration.
ms 2 for 3 s
Draw the v-t graph and find the total distance travelled.
Total distance travelled is the area under the graph (in this case we need to find the
area of a trapezium).
distance=1/2{(a+b)h}
= {(9+6)4.5}
=33.75 m