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Chapter 8 Lesson 3 Describing and Measuring Motion When is an Object in Motion? SC.6.N.2.2., SC.6.N.2.3, SC.6.P.12.1.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 8 Lesson 3 Describing and Measuring Motion When is an Object in Motion? SC.6.N.2.2., SC.6.N.2.3, SC.6.P.12.1."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 8 Lesson 3 Describing and Measuring Motion When is an Object in Motion? SC.6.N.2.2., SC.6.N.2.3, SC.6.P.12.1

2 Vocabulary Motion Reference point International System of Units distance

3 When is an Object in Motion?  An object is in motion if its position changes relative to another object.  To decide if you are moving, you use a reference point, a place or object used for comparison to determine if something is in motion.  An object is in motion if it changes position relative to a reference point.

4 Relative Motion If you use your chair as a reference point as you sit and read, you are not moving. Suppose you use the sun as a reference point instead of your chair. If you compare your position to the sun, you are moving because you & your chair are on the Earth which revolves around the sun.

5 Measuring Distance  To describe motion, you need to use units of measurement.  Scientists use a system of measurement called the International System of Units (SI)  Distance is the length of the path between 2 points, the SI unit for length is the meter (m).

6 Chapter 8 Lesson 4 Speed and Velocity How Do You Calculate Speed? How Do You Describe Velocity? How Do You Graph Motion? SC.6.P.12.1

7 Vocabulary Speed Average speed Instantaneous speed Velocity slope

8 How do you calculate speed? Speed is the distance an object moves per unit of time. Formula for speed: speed = distance time Example: If an athlete bikes a distance of 50 kilometers in 2 hours, what is the athlete’s speed? 50 km = 25 km/hr. 2 hrs.

9 Average Speed Average Speed = total distance divided by total time. Example: A triathlete swims a distance of 3 km in 1 hour, bikes a distance of 50 km in 3 hours and runs a distance of 12km in 1 hour. What is the athlete’s average speed? Total distance = 3km + 50km + 12km = 65km Total time = 1h + 3h + 1h = 5 h Average speed = 65 km = 13km/h 5h

10 Instantaneous Speed Instantaneous speed is the speed at which an object is moving at a given instant in time. What is the instantaneous speed of the speedometer on the left?

11 Velocity Velocity is the speed and direction of an object’s motion. For example if a train is traveling west at 100 mph, its velocity is 100mph west.

12 How do you graph motion? You can show the motion of an object on a line graph in which you plot distance versus time. The steepness of a line on a graph is called slope.

13 You can calculate the slope of a line by dividing the rise by the run. Rise is the vertical difference between any 2 points on the line. Run is the horizontal difference between the same 2 points.

14 Chapter 8 Lesson 5 Acceleration What is Acceleration? How Do You Graph Acceleration? SC.6.P.12.1

15 Vocabulary Acceleration is the rate at which velocity changes.  In everyday language, acceleration means “the process of speeding up”.  In Science, acceleration refers to increasing speed, decreasing speed, or changing direction.

16 CHANGING SPEED Whenever an object’s speed changes, the object accelerates. A car that begins to move from a stopped position or speeds up to pass another car is accelerating. A car can also slow down, this change in speed is sometimes called deceleration or negative acceleration.

17 CHANGING DIRECTION Even an object that is traveling at a constant speed can be accelerating when they change direction. A car accelerates as it follows a gentle curve in the road or changes lanes.

18 Calculating Acceleration Acceleration = Final speed – Initial speed Time Example: A small airplane is moving down a runway. It accelerates from a speed of 0 m/s to a speed of 24 m/s in 3 seconds. What is the airplane’s average acceleration? Final speed = 24m/s 24m/s – 0m/s = 24m/s = 8 m/s² Initial speed = 0 m/s 3 s 3 s Time = 3 s

19 Graphing Acceleration You can use a speed-versus-time graph and a distance-versus-time graph to analyze the motion of an accelerating object. Distance-Versus-Time Graph Use the time and distance data in the table to plot a line graph. Plot time on the horizontal axis. Plot distance on the vertical axis. What would be a good title for the graph? Speed-Versus-Time Graph Use the time and speed data in the table to plot a line graph. Plot time on the horizontal axis. Plot speed on the vertical axis. What would be a good title for the graph?


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