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Published byBruce Adams Modified over 9 years ago
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In this chapter you will: Represent motion through the use of words, motion diagrams, and graphs. Use the terms position, distance, displacement, and time interval in a scientific manner to describe motion.
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CHAPTER 2 SECTIONS Section 2.1: Picturing Motion Section 2.2: Where and When? Section 2.3: Position-Time Graphs Section 2.4: How Fast?
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SECTION 2.1 PICTURING MOTION Objectives Draw motion diagrams to describe motion. Develop a particle model to represent a moving object.
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INTRO/ALL KINDS OF MOTION Perceiving motion is instinctive — your eyes pay more attention to moving objects than to stationary ones. Movement is all around you. Movement travels in many directions, such as the straight-line path of a bowling ball in a lane’s gutter, the curved path of a tether ball, the spiral of a falling kite, and the swirls of water circling a drain. When an object is in motion, its position changes. Its position can change along the path of a straight line, a circle, an arc, or a back-and- forth vibration. When beginning a new area of study, it is generally a good idea to begin with what appears to be the least complicated situation, learn as much as possible about it, and then gradually add more complexity to that simple model.
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ALL KINDS OF MOTION A description of motion relates to Place and Time. You must be able to answer the questions of where and when an object is positioned to describe its motion.
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MOTION DIAGRAMS Motion Diagram – a series of images showing the positions of a moving object taken at regular or equal time intervals.
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THE PARTICLE MODEL Particle Model – is a simplified version of a motion diagram in which the object in motion is replaced by a series of single points.
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QUESTION 2 A car is moving at a speed of 90 km/h. What is the speed of the car in m/s? (Hint: Use Dimensional Analysis) 90 km | 1 h | 1000 m = 25 m/s h | 3600 s | 1 km
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QUESTION 1 Explain how applying the particle model produces a simplified version of a motion diagram? Keeping track of the motion of the runner is easier if we disregard the movements of the arms and the legs, and instead concentrate on a single point at the center of the body. In effect, we can disregard the fact that the runner has some size and imagine that the runner is a very small object located precisely at that central point. A particle model is a simplified version of a motion diagram in which the object in motion is replaced by a series of single points.
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QUESTION 2 Which statement describes best the motion diagram of an object in motion? A graph of the time data on a horizontal axis and the position on a vertical axis. A series of images showing the positions of a moving object at equal time intervals. Diagram in which the object in motion is replaced by a series of single point. A diagram that tells us the location of zero point of the object in motion and the direction in which the object is moving. B: A series of images showing the positions of a moving object at equal time intervals is called a motion diagram.
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QUESTION 3 What is the purpose of drawing a motion diagram or a particle model? To calculate the speed of the object in motion. To calculate the distance covered by the object in a particular time. To check whether an object is in motion. To calculate the instantaneous velocity of the object in motion. C: To check whether an object is in motion.
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