Set Your Clicker To Channel 21. Do Not Use A Smartphone or Other Messaging Devices in Class. Please Turn Them Off
Set Your Clicker To Channel 21. Do Not Use A Smartphone or Other Messaging Devices in Class. Please Turn Them Off
PHY 131
Lecture 4
Finish Chapter 2
Describing Motion:
Kinematics in One Dimension
2/6/15 Lecture 4 1
Are you here with clicker set to channel 21?
1. Yes
175
s
Ye
2/6/15 Lecture 4 2
RE-CAP: 1d Motion with Constant Acceleration
• Sec. 2-5 of the text begins with the derivation of four “kinematic equations”
– Notation will now be simplified:
Initial time will be represented by t0 = 0 (not t1) and elapsed time by t (not by t2 ).
The “1d” coordinate can be called x or y or anything; we’ll use x as the example here.
Initial position will be represented by x0 = 0 (not x1) and initial velocity by v0 = 0 (not by v1)
At time t position and velocity will be called x and v (not x2 and v2)
The average velocity during time interval (t ─t0) will be (because t0 = 0)
• Study the derivations in Sec. 2-5. The results are these highlighted equations:
2/6/15 Lecture 4 4
RE-CAP: Solving “Word” Problems: text p. 30. All “9 steps” are used
in the worked out
2/6/15 Lecture 4 5
RE-CAP: Solving “Word” Problems: text p. 30. All “9 steps” are used
in the worked out
3 significant figures
in the result because
all input numbers
have 3 sig. figs.
2/6/15 Lecture 4 6
A car starts from rest and accelerates at constant a = 10 m/s2 in a race
that is 402 m long. How fast is the car going at the finish line?
1. 63 m/s
2. 90 m/s
3. 809 m/s
4. 8040 m/s
5. Cannot be determined
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2/6/15 Lecture 4 7
A car starts from rest and accelerates at constant a = 10 m/s2 in a race
that is 402 m long. How long does the race last?
1. 9.0 s
2. 13 s
3. 18 s
4. 80 s
5. Cannot be determined
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18
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2/6/15 Lecture 4 8
RE-CAP: Here’s where we finished Lecture 3: P1
“Time for a ball to drop a distance h” v0 = 0 (from rest)
Check:
units; precision; is
answer sensible?
Yes!
2/6/15 Lecture 4 9
Follow-on Problems from P1? Yes!
• P2: What is the ball’s speed just as it hits the ground?
– simple: v (t=3.00 s) = v0 – gt = ? Eq. (2-12a):
= 0 – 9.80 ms─2 × 3.00 s
= –29.4 m/s (i.e., “downward”)
• P3: A person on the ground now throws a ball straight up at 20 m/s
(~50 mi/hr). How high above ground will it go?
– Draw new diagram! We need ymax (and, for below, tmax)
– simple: y - y0 = (v2 – v02)/2a Eq. (2-12c)
ymax – 0 = (0 – v02)/(–2g)
ymax = v02/2g
= (20.0 ms–1)2/(2 x 9.80) ms–2 = 20.4 m (well below roof height)
• P4: How long before the ball returns to the ground?
– simple: v (at ymax) = v0 – gtmax Eq. (2-12a)
thus: tmax = (v0 ─ 0)/g = 20 ms–1/9.80 ms-2
= 2.04 s ⇒ ttotal = 2tmax = 4.08 s
• P5: A ball thrown straight up stays ttot = 4.00 s in the
air before it hits ground again; how high did it go?
v – v0 = –gt ; at ttot = 4.00 s: v = –v0 Eq. (2-12a)
thus: –2v0 = –gttot, and v0 = 19.8 m/s compare to P3 and P4
2/6/15 Lecture 4 10
Ask a Different Question from P1: P1’
• A ball is thrown upwards from the roof with v0= 15 m/s.
When does it hit the ground now?
v0 = +15 m/s (up)
Sketch + symbols + givens + to find(s): y
a = –g = –9.80 m/s2
– Only one dimension: y (but up and down)
y0 = 44 m
– Acceleration is constant
y(t) = 0 m;
– vy varies with t v (t)
t = ??
44 m
• Solution: need to find t given y0, v0, a
2/6/15 Lecture 4 11
Continued: Ask a Different Question from P1: P1’
v0 = +15 m/s (up)
y
a = –g = –9.80 m/s2
y0 = 44 m
y(t) = 0 m;
v (t)
t = ??
44 m
y
x
2/6/15 Lecture 4 13
text, p. 33:
2/6/15 Lecture 4 14
text, p. 33:
2/6/15 Lecture 4 15
text, p. 33:
2/6/15 Lecture 4 17