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Describing Motion

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Page 1: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Describing Motion

Page 2: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Basic Terminology

Position: Where an object is located in space

Think of mile markers along a highway

Page 3: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Basic Terminology

Position: Where an object is located in space

Think of mile markers along a highway

Speed: How quickly position is changing – just a non-negative number

Velocity: How quickly position is changing – includes direction of change

Page 4: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Basic Terminology

Position: Where an object is located in space

Think of mile markers along a highway

Speed: How quickly position is changing – just a non-negative number

Velocity: How quickly position is changing – includes direction of change

Acceleration: How quickly velocity is changing – includes direction of change

Any change in velocity is an acceleration

Page 5: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Turning is acceleration:

While speed may be constant, the direction of the velocity is changing

Page 6: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

How many “accelerators” – in the physics sense of the word – does a car have?

A) 1: The gas pedal

B) 2: The gas pedal and the brake

C) 3: The gas pedal, the brake, and the steering wheel

D) 4: The gas pedal, the brake, the steering wheel, and the blinkers

Page 7: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Acceleration: How quickly velocity is changing – includes direction of change

Can include speeding up, slowing down, OR turning

Page 8: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Acceleration due to gravity

Every second in freefall, the force of gravity adds 10 m/s to the speed of the falling object

We say the object’s acceleration isg = 10 m/s/s = 10 m/s2

NOTE: This is the value at the surface of the Earth

(more precisely, g = 9.8 m/s2)

Page 9: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Of course, this ignores air resistance…

Air resistance demo…

Page 10: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Ignoring air resistance, how fast will a rock be falling 5 seconds after it is dropped?

A) 5 m/s

B) 10 m/s

C) 25 m/s

D) 50 m/s

E) 100 m/s

Page 11: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Force and Momentum

Momentum is the product of mass and velocity

The faster an object moves, the more momentum it has.

A more massive object, traveling at the same speed, will have more momentum.

Demonstration . . .

Page 12: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Force and Momentum

Momentum is the product of mass and velocity

The faster an object moves, the more momentum it has.

A more massive object, traveling at the same speed, will have more momentum.

Demonstration . . .

The only way to change on objects momentum is to apply a Force to it.

Conversely, if a net force is applied to an object, the object’s momentum WILL change.

Demonstration . . .

Page 13: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Force and Momentum

Momentum is the product of mass and velocity

The faster an object moves, the more momentum it has.

A more massive object, traveling at the same speed, will have more momentum.

Demonstration . . .

The only way to change on objects momentum is to apply a Force to it.

Conversely, if a net force is applied to an object, the object’s momentum WILL change.

Demonstration . . .

Momentum of an object is “conserved” if there are no external forces.

Page 14: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Rotational Motion

An object that is rotating has Angular Momentum

Demonstration . . .

Page 15: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Mass and Weight

Mass is the amount of matter in an object.

Weight is the force that a scale measures when you stand on it.

Weight depends on mass as well as gravity and other forces acting on an object…

Page 16: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Mass and Weight

Mass is the amount of matter in an object.

Weight is the force that a scale measures when you stand on it.

Weight depends on mass as well as gravity and other forces acting on an object…

Page 17: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Mass and Weight

Another example…

If Buzz Aldrin weighed 190 lbs on Earth, he only weighed 31 lbs on the Moon.

His mass didn’t change.

Page 18: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

“Weightlessness”

In freefall, there IS gravity.Man and machine fall together, accelerating at the same rate.

So neither has to push on the other – they’re “weightless”

Page 19: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

Astro-Cash Cab!

Carl Cook

Quincey Davison

Rebecca Lopez

Faleen Lobato

Jeffrey Crawford

Page 20: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

1) What do we call any change in motion?

A) Force

B) Mass

C) Speed

D) Velocity

E) Acceleration

Page 21: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

2) True or False ?

Astronauts in space are weightless because there is no gravity in space.

Page 22: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

3) Which of the following is NOT an example of acceleration?

A race car driving at 225 mph on a long straightaway.

A kid on a bicycle going 5 mph around a turn.

A book sliding to a stop on the floor.

A spacecraft in orbit around the Earth.

Page 23: Describing Motion. Basic Terminology Position: Where an object is located in space Think of mile markers along a highway

4) Compared to standing on earth, when an astronaut is standing on the Moon her _________ is the same, but her _________ is different.

Mass

Weight