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Reading Assignment: Chapter 2 by Tuesday

This document discusses key concepts in kinematics including displacement vectors, velocity vectors, acceleration vectors, and how to represent motion using graphs of position, velocity, and acceleration over time. Specifically, it defines displacement as the change in position, velocity as the rate of change of position or displacement over time, and acceleration as the rate of change of velocity. It explains how to calculate these values using vectors and how to determine the direction and sign of vectors in different coordinate systems. Finally, it shows how motion can be analyzed using graphs of position, velocity, and acceleration plotted against time.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
104 views29 pages

Reading Assignment: Chapter 2 by Tuesday

This document discusses key concepts in kinematics including displacement vectors, velocity vectors, acceleration vectors, and how to represent motion using graphs of position, velocity, and acceleration over time. Specifically, it defines displacement as the change in position, velocity as the rate of change of position or displacement over time, and acceleration as the rate of change of velocity. It explains how to calculate these values using vectors and how to determine the direction and sign of vectors in different coordinate systems. Finally, it shows how motion can be analyzed using graphs of position, velocity, and acceleration plotted against time.

Uploaded by

andrewC
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Reading Assignment

Chapter 2 by Tuesday
Position Vector

35 miles SW
Displacement Vector
!
r1

!
Displacement r
Vector !
35 miles SW
r0

Displacement vector is the change of position.

denotes change in physics.


Vector Addition
! !
A+ B
Put the tail of one vector at the head of the other.
Then connect the ends.

! !
A B

! !
A B
! !
A+ B
Vector Addition
!
r1

! !
r r0

New position is the sum of original position plus displacement.


! ! !
r1 = r0 + r
Displacement vector is the change of position.
! ! !
r = r1 r0
Vector Subtraction
Subtracting is the same as adding the negative.
! ! ! !
A B = A + ( B)
Vector Subtraction
Subtracting is the same as adding the negative.
! ! ! !
A B = A + ( B)

! !
A B

!
B
! !
A B
!
A
Displacement Vectors and Motion Diagrams

Displacement Vectors
Displacement Vectors (2D)

Vectors are straight!


Velocity
Displacement is change in position (in meters)
! ! !
r = r1 r0
Velocity is change in position over time (in meters/s)
!
! r
v=
t
Time is a scalar, not a vector. Velocity is in the same
direction as displacement (with different units).
!
! ! r
r v=
t
Velocity Vectors

!
! r3
v3 =
t 3
!
! r2
v2 =
t 2
Completing the Motion Description

! ! !
Displacement vector = change in position r = r0 r1

!
! r
Velocity vector = rate of change in position v=
t

!
! v
Acceleration vector = rate of change in velocity a=
t
Acceleration Vectors
! ! !
! v v3 v2
a= =
t t 3 t 2
!
v3
Vector Subtraction
! ! !
v3 v2 Notice: Final - Initial
Always! a !
v2
!
! v2
v3 !
a
Coordinate Systems

Specify an origin to define zero.


Label x- and y-axes to indicate positive directions.

! !
v1 v2
(0,0) x

Think carefully about axes


y x
Origin at start
One axis along motion
Vector Signs

Vector is positive if it points in the positive direction.

0 10 20 x
Vector Signs (Position)

Vector is positive if it points in the positive direction.

Position vector (starts at origin). So positive position is


when object is on positive side of axes.

0 10 20 x
Vector Signs (Velocity)

Velocity vector positive if moving toward larger


numbers
Position can be negative

!
v1
-10 0 10 x
Vector Signs (Acceleration)
Acceleration is positive if positive velocity getting
larger or negative velocity decreasing
! !
v3 v4

Acceleration vector is pointing in the positive direction.

! !
v2 v1

Acceleration vector is pointing in the positive direction.


Acceleration vs. Deceleration

Acceleration is a general term describing the rate


of change of velocity.
Can describe speeding up or slowing down.
Deceleration is just when the acceleration vector points in
the opposite direction of the velocity (as below).

! !
v2 v1
Example (Ball thrown straight up)

What is direction of the acceleration on the


Up Down way up?
! ! ! !
v3 v4 v2 v1
! !
v2 v5
! ! What is the acceleration on the way down?
v1 v6 !
v6 !
v5
! !
v0 v7
!
What is the acceleration at the top?
v4
!
v3
Plots (vs. Time)

0 10 20 x

x Find magnitude of
20 position vector at each
time interval and plot it.
10

t
v
Find magnitude of velocity
vector at each time
interval and plot it.

t
Plots (vs. Time)
Connect the dots and we get a continuous function.
Analyzing these curves (with calculus) will take up the next
couple of lectures (Ch. 2)

t
v

t
Summary (Motion Diagrams)

0 10 20 x

!
Position vectors r

! ! !
Displacement vectors r = r1 r0
!
! r
Velocity vectors v=
t
!
! v
Acceleration vectors a=
t
Average Velocity
!
! r
v=
t

r x
vavg = =
t t

Average velocity is the slope of the position vs. time curve


between two points.
Instantaneous Velocity
Instantaneous Velocity

Imagine decreasing t
In the limit that t 0, we obtain the instantaneous velocity
at a single instant

tangent
Instantaneous Velocity
s ds
vs = lim =
t0 t dt

The instantaneous velocity is the derivative of the position


vs. time plot, s(t).
Instantaneous velocity is the slope of the position vs. time
curve at a single point

Note: s(t) is a generic position axes: could be x, y, z, or


combination of them.
Derivatives
Example:
du
u = ct n
= nct n1
s = 3t + t + 4
2
dt
ds
v= =?
dt
du
u=c =0
dt
v = 6t + 1

d du dw
(u + w) = +
dt dt dt
Pick the easy points (extrema,
Examples slope=0) and connect the dots

Position vs. Time

Velocity vs. Time


t

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