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Published byArthur Casey Modified over 8 years ago
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Car Safety
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Checking Car Speed Radar guns bounce microwaves off cars and get their speed over a very short distance Speed cameras take pictures of cars 0.5s apart
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Other Speed Methods Detector cables measure the speed of cars going over them. This is close to instantaneous speed Shame display boards tell motorists when they are speeding
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Your Own Speed Your car speedometer can give you your speed.
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Why is your speed important? If you are travelling faster, you have more momentum (mass x velocity) If you want to stop, you have to reduce your momentum to zero Change in momentum = force x time
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Car Safety features Crumple Zones Air Bags Seat Belts
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What happens to your body in a crash? One tenth of a second after impact the motor vehicle comes to a stop, then the occupant slams into the car's interior. Immediately after the unbelted occupant stops moving, his internal organs collide with other organs and skeletal systems.
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Without a crumple zone or seat-belt When the car hits something The car stops but you don’t Eventually you WILL come to a short sharp stop
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Crumple Zones These make the time for the car to stop longer. Change of momentum = force x time Increasing the time makes the force less
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Air Bags These inflate very quickly after the impact They cushion you They change the momentum over a longer time This means the force on you is less
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Car Seat Belts View Interactive Seatbelt simulationInteractive Seatbelt simulation These prevent you from flying through the windscreen Why don’t they hold you back against the car seat? – Think about the change of momentum and the time taken
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To Summarise 1.Change in momentum = force x time 2.If you are moving faster, you have more momentum 3.If you can stop over a longer time, this reduces the force needed 4.Seat belts, air bags and crumple zones all mean that you stop over a longer time, so the force (and your injury) is less
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