Title: Motion with constant acceleration
1Motion with constant acceleration
Lecture deals with a very common type of motion
motion with constant acceleration After this
lecture, you should know about Kinematic
equations Free fall.
2Summary of Concepts(from last lecture)
- kinematics A description of motion
- position your coordinates
- displacement ?x change of position
- distance magnitude of displacement
- velocity rate of change of position
- average ?x/?t
- instantaneous slope of x vs. t
- speed magnitude of velocity
- acceleration rate of change of velocity
- average ?v/?t
- instantaneous slope of v vs. t
3Motion with constant acceleration in 1D
Kinematic equations
An object moves with constant acceleration when
the instantaneous acceleration at any point in a
time interval is equal to the value of the
average acceleration over the entire time
interval. Choose t00
4Motion with constant acceleration in 1D
Kinematic equations (II)
Because velocity changes uniformly with time, the
average velocity in the time interval is the
arithmetic average of the initial and
final velocities
(1)
(2)
Putting (1) and (2) together
5Motion with constant acceleration in 1D
Kinematic equations (III)
The area under the graph of velocity vs time for
a given time interval is equal to the
displacement ?x of the object in that time
interval
6Motion with constant acceleration in 1D
Kinematic equations (IV)
Putting the following two formulas together
another way
7Motion with constant acceleration in 1D
Kinematic equations (V)
- ?x v0t 1/2 at2 (parabolic)
- ?v at (linear)
- v2 v02 2a ?x (independent of time)
8Use of Kinematic Equations
- Gives displacement as a function of velocity and
time - Use when you dont know or need the acceleration
- Shows velocity as a function of acceleration and
time - Use when you dont know or need the displacement
- Gives displacement given time, velocity
acceleration - Use when you dont know or need the final velocity
- Gives velocity as a function of acceleration and
displacement - Use when you dont know or need the time
9Example for motion with aconst in 1D Free fall
The Guinea and Feather tube
Experimental observations
Earths gravity accelerates objects equally,
regardless of their mass.
10Free Fall Principles
- Objects moving under the influence of gravity
only are in free fall - Free fall does not depend on the objects
original motion - Objects falling near earths surface due to
gravity fall with constant acceleration,
indicated by g - g 9.80 m/s2
- g is always directed downward
- toward the center of the earth
- Ignoring air resistance and assuming g doesnt
vary with altitude over short vertical distances,
free fall is constantly accelerated motion
11Summary Constant Acceleration
- Constant Acceleration
- x x0 v0xt 1/2 at2
- vx v0x at
- vx2 v0x2 2a(x - x0)
- Free Fall (a -g)
- y y0 v0yt - 1/2 gt2
- vy v0y - gt
- vy2 v0y2 - 2g(y - y0)
12Example 1
- A ball is thrown straight up in the air and
returns to its initial position. For the time
the ball is in the air, which of the following
statements is true? - 1 - Both average acceleration and average
velocity are zero. - 2 - Average acceleration is zero but average
velocity is not zero. - 3 - Average velocity is zero but average
acceleration is not zero. - 4 - Neither average acceleration nor average
velocity are zero.
Free fall acceleration is constant (-g) Initial
position final position ?x0 averaged vel
?x/ ?t 0
13Free Fall dropping throwing
- Drop
- Initial velocity is zero
- Acceleration is always g -9.80 m/s2
- Throw Down
- Initial velocity is negative
- Acceleration is always g -9.80 m/s2
- Throw Upward
- Initial velocity is positive
- Instantaneous velocity at maximum height is 0
- Acceleration is always g -9.80 m/s2
vo 0 (drop) volt 0 (throw) a g
v 0 a g
14Throwing Down Question
A ball is thrown downward (not dropped) from the
top of a tower. After being released, its
downward acceleration will be 1. greater than
g 2. exactly g 3. smaller than g
15Example 2
- A ball is thrown vertically upward. At the very
top of its trajectory, which of the following
statements is true - 1. velocity is zero and acceleration is zero2.
velocity is not zero and acceleration is zero3.
velocity is zero and acceleration is not zero4.
velocity is not zero and acceleration is not zero
16Example 3A
- Dennis and Carmen are standing on the edge of a
cliff. Dennis throws a basketball vertically
upward, and at the same time Carmen throws a
basketball vertically downward with the same
initial speed. You are standing below the cliff
observing this strange behavior. Whose ball is
moving fastest when it hits the ground? - 1. Dennis' ball 2. Carmen's ball 3.
Same
On the dotted line ?y0 gt v2 v02 v
v0 When Denniss ball returns to dotted
line its v -v0 Same as Carmens
17Example 3B
- Dennis and Carmen are standing on the edge of a
cliff. Dennis throws a basketball vertically
upward, and at the same time Carmen throws a
basketball vertically downward with the same
initial speed. You are standing below the cliff
observing this strange behavior. Whose ball hits
the ground at the base of the cliff first? - 1. Dennis' ball 2. Carmen's ball 3.
Same
Time for Denniss ball to return to the dotted
line v v0 - g t v -v0 t 2 v0 / g This
is the extra time taken by Denniss ball
18Example 4
- An object is dropped from rest. If it falls a
distance D in time t then how far will if fall in
a time 2t ? - 1. D/4 2. D/2 3. D 4. 2D
5. 4D
Follow-up question If the object has speed v at
time t then what is the speed at time 2t ? 1.
v/4 2. v/2 3. v 4. 2v
5. 4v
19Example 5
Which of the following statements is most nearly
correct? 1 - A car travels around a circular
track with constant velocity. 2 - A car travels
around a circular track with constant speed. 3-
Both statements are equally correct.
- The direction of the velocity changes when going
around circle. - Speed is the magnitude of velocity -- it does not
have a direction and therefore does not change
20Motion in 2D
After this lecture, you should know
about Vectors. Displacement, velocity and
acceleration in 2D. Projectile motion.
21One Dimension
- Define origin
- Define sense of direction
- Position is a signed number (direction and
magnitude) - Displacement, velocity, acceleration are also
specified by signed numbers
Reference Frame
0
1
2
3
4
-4
-1
-2
-3
22Vectors
- There are quantities in physics which are
determined uniquely by one number - Mass is one of them.
- Temperature is one of them.
- Speed is one of them.
- We call those scalars.
- There are others where you need more than one
number for instance for 1D motion, velocity has
a certain magnitude-- - that's the speed--
- but you also have to know whether it goes this
way or that. - So there has to be a direction.
- We call those vectors.
23Two Dimensions
- Again, select an origin
- Draw two mutually perpendicular lines meeting at
the origin - Select /- directions for horizontal (x) and
vertical (y) axes - Any position in the plane is given by two signed
numbers - A vector points to this position
24Properties of vectors
- Equality of two Vectors
- Two vectors are equal if they have the same
magnitude and the same direction - Movement of vectors in a diagram
- Any vector can be moved parallel to itself
without being affected - Negative Vectors
- One vector is the negative of another one if they
have both the same magnitude but are 180 apart
(opposite directions) -
- Resultant Vector
- The resultant vector is the sum of a given set of
vectors -
- Position can be anywhere in the plane
25Adding and subtracting vectors geometrically
y
D
x
26Multiplying or Dividing a Vector by a Scalar
- The result of the multiplication or division is a
vector - The magnitude of the vector is multiplied or
divided by the scalar - If the scalar is positive, the direction of the
result is the same as of the original vector - If the scalar is negative, the direction of the
result is opposite that of the original vector
27Components of a Vector
- A component is a part
- It is useful to use rectangular components
- These are the projections of the vector along the
x- and y-axes - The x-component of a vector is the projection
along the x-axis - The y-component of a vector is the projection
along the y-axis - Then, one can define the component vectors
- Attention ? is measured counter-clock-wise with
respect to the positive x-axis
28Components of a vector (II)
- The components are the legs of the right triangle
whose hypotenuse is - May still have to find ? with respect to the
positive x-axis
29Adding Vectors Algebraically
- Choose a coordinate system and sketch the vectors
- Find the x- and y-components of all the vectors
- Add all the x-components
- This gives Rx
- Add all the y-components
- This gives Ry
- Use the Pythagorean Theorem to find the magnitude
of the resultant - Use the inverse tangent function to find the
direction of R - Inversion is not unique, the value will be
correct only if the angle lies in the first or
fourth quadrant - In the second or third quadrant, add 180
30Example 6
- Can a vector have a component bigger than its
magnitude? - Yes
- No
The square of magnitude of a vector is given in
terms of its components by R2 Rx 2 Ry 2 Since
the square is always positive the components
cannot be larger than the magnitude
31Example 7
- The sum of the two components of a non-zero 2-D
vector is zero. Which of these directions is the
vector pointing in? - 45o
- 90o
- 135o
- 180o
135o
-45o
The sum of components is zero implies Rx -
Ry The angle, ? tan-1(Ry / Rx) tan-1 -1
135o -45o (not unique, multiples of 2 ?)
322D motion Displacement
- The position of an object is described by its
position vector, - The displacement of the object is defined as the
change in its position -
332D motion Velocity and acceleration
- The average velocity is the ratio of the
displacement to the time interval for the
displacement - The instantaneous velocity is the limit of the
average velocity as ?t approaches zero - The direction of the instantaneous velocity is
along a line that is tangent to the path of the
particle and in the direction of motion - The average acceleration is defined as the rate
at which the velocity changes - The instantaneous acceleration is the limit of
the average acceleration as ?t approaches zero - Ways an object might accelerate
- The magnitude of the velocity (the speed) can
change - The direction of the velocity can change
- Both the magnitude and the direction can change
34Kinematics in Two Dimensions
- x x0 v0xt 1/2 axt2
- vx v0x axt
- vx2 v0x2 2ax ?x
- y y0 v0yt 1/2 ayt2
- vy v0y ayt
- vy2 v0y2 2ay ?y
x and y motions are independent! They share a
common time t
352D motion Projectile motion
Dimensional Analysis
Motion of a soccer ball
Strategy
36Kinematics for Projectile Motion ax 0
ay -g
- y y0 v0yt - 1/2 gt2
- vy v0y - gt
- vy2 v0y2 - 2g ?y
x and y motions are independent! They share a
common time t
37Projectile Motion
y -x2, i.e. parabolic dependence on x
38Projectile MotionMaximum height reachedTime
taken for getting there
39Projectile Motion Maximum Range
40Projectile Motion at Various Initial Angles
- Complementary values of the initial angle result
in the same range - The heights will be different
- The maximum range occurs at a projection angle of
45o
41Soccer Ball
Make sense of what you get
Check limiting cases