Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

CHAPTER 2 Get ready to take notes!

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "CHAPTER 2 Get ready to take notes!"— Presentation transcript:

1 CHAPTER 2 Get ready to take notes!

2 Ch. 2 Motion and Speed

3 Motion – when an object changes position relative to a reference point

4 Distance - how far an object moves
Displacement - distance and direction relative to an object’s starting position

5 12 Distance = _____ m Displacement = _____ m

6 Speed - distance an object travels per unit of time

7 Speed that doesn’t change over time is constant speed.
The red and green car are traveling at a constant speed.

8 In real life, speed is usually not constant; most objects have changing speed.

9 Average speed - speed of motion when speed changes
Average speed is used to describe everyday motion.

10 Avg. speed = total distance
total travel time = ____ m = ____ m/hr hr 5 25 0.2

11 120 12 10 60 6 10 red car = ____ m = ___ m/s s
(Hint: Each burst of motion happens in 1 second. Count the number of movements.) red car = ____ m = ___ m/s s blue car = ____ m = ___ m/s 120 12 10 60 6 10

12 Velocity - speed and direction relative to starting position.

13 Determine the average speed and the average velocity of the skier during the 3 minutes.

14 average speed = m = m/min min average velocity = m, = m , min min 420 140 3 140 right right 46.7 3

15 Instantaneous speed - speed at any given point in time.
Your speedometer shows instantaneous speed.

16 Acceleration – change in speed or direction or both.

17 Roller coasters show that changes in speed and/or direction cause acceleration.
Positive acceleration = increasing speed. Negative acceleration = decreasing speed.

18

19

20 Acceleration = change in velocity time Change in velocity = final velocity – initial velocity Unit - meters per second squared (m/s2)

21 Graphing Motion

22 A distance-time graph displays motion of an object over time.
Plot: distance on the y-axis time on the x-axis.

23

24 Green: Straight line, pos. slope = constant speed to right.
Red: Straight line, lower pos. slope = slower constant speed. A flat line = no motion. Straight line, neg. slope = constant speed, going left. Blue: Curved line = changing speed or acceleration.

25

26 Albert runs faster and faster (accelerates) steadily.
Bob is also accelerating but at slower speeds than Albert. Charlie travels: at a constant speed of about 6 m/s for 8 s, stops for 5 s, accelerates for 5 s more.

27 Albert, because he ran the distance in the least time.
Who won the race? Albert, because he ran the distance in the least time.

28 Slow, Constant, Left Slow, Constant, Right Fast, Constant, Left Fast, Constant, Right

29 constant velocity in the positive direction (right)

30 constant velocity in the negative direction (left)

31

32 The blue car starts ahead of the red car (to the left of the screen)
The blue car starts ahead of the red car (to the left of the screen). Since the red car is moving faster, it catches up with and passes the blue car.

33

34 Observe the velocity-time graphs
Observe the velocity-time graphs. Each car's motion is represented by a horizontal line (constant velocity).

35 Observe that even though the cars pass each other, the lines on the velocity-time graphs do not intersect. Since the cars never have the same velocity, the lines on the velocity-time graph never cross.

36 The lines would intersect for a position vs
The lines would intersect for a position vs. time graph; the red car passing the blue car means that there is an instant when they occupy the same position (at 7 s); yet they never have the same velocity at any instant in time.

37 A velocity-time graph displays speed of an object over time.
Plot: velocity on the y-axis time on the x-axis.

38 Positive Velocity, Positive Acceleration Positive Velocity, Zero Acceleration

39 Negative Velocity, Negative Acceleration Negative Velocity, Zero Acceleration

40 Positive acceleration
dist.-time graph - up curve vel.-time graph - pos. slope acc.-time graph - above zero Positive acceleration

41 Negative Acceleration
dist.-time graph - down curve vel.-time graph - neg. slope acc.-time graph - below zero Negative Acceleration

42 Motion and Forces

43 Force - a push or pull one body applies to another
Force - a push or pull one body applies to another. A force can cause an object’s motion to change. When two or more forces combine at the same time, they create a net force.

44 Balanced forces are equal in size and opposite in direction.
Unbalanced forces are unequal in size and/or not in the same direction.

45 Inertia and Mass

46 Inertia - an object’s resistance to any change in motion.
Objects with greater mass have greater inertia.

47 Newton’s 1st law of motion - an object moving at a constant velocity keeps moving at that velocity unless a net force acts on it; an object at rest will stay at rest unless a net force acts on it.

48 Auto crash - inertia at work
Passengers not wearing a seat belt continue forward at that speed even after the car stops.

49 Passengers wearing a seat belt slow down as the car slows down.

50 THE END


Download ppt "CHAPTER 2 Get ready to take notes!"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google