MECHANICS Kinematics: Chapter 2 - Motion Along A Straight Line
MECHANICS Kinematics: Chapter 2 - Motion Along A Straight Line
MECHANICS Kinematics: Chapter 2 - Motion Along A Straight Line
II. Velocity
III. Acceleration
IV. Motion in one dimension with constant acceleration
V. Free fall
The smooth curve is a guess as to what happened between the data points.
x = x2-x1
(2.1)
Coordinate system
x1=x2
x2
x1
t
x >0
t
x = 0
Only the initial and final coordinates influence the displacement many
different motions between x1and x2 give the same displacement.
Review:
- Vector quantities need both magnitude (size or numerical value) and
direction to completely describe them.
- We will use + and signs to indicate vector directions.
- Scalar quantities are completely described by magnitude only.
II.
Velocity
x x 2 x1
=
t
t 2 t1
(2.2)
Average speed:
Savg =
Total distance
t
(2.3)
Scalar quantity
Same units as velocity
Example: A person drives 4 mi at 30 mi/h and 4 mi and 50 mi/h Is the
average speed >,<,= 40 mi/h ?
<40 mi/h
t1= 4 mi/(30 mi/h)=0.13 h ; t2= 4 mi/(50 mi/h)=0.08 h ttot= 0.213 h
Savg= 8 mi/0.213h = 37.5mi/h
t 0
x dx
=
t dt
(2.4)
- Vector quantity
- The limit of the average velocity as the time interval becomes infinitesimally
short, or as the time interval approaches zero.
- The instantaneous velocity indicates what is happening at every point of time.
- Can be positive, negative, or zero.
x(t)
Instantaneous velocity:
Position
When the velocity is constant, the average velocity over any time interval is
equal to the instantaneous velocity at any time.
Instantaneous speed: Magnitude of the instantaneous velocity.
Example: car speedometer.
- Scalar quantity
Average velocity (or average acceleration) always refers to an specific
time interval.
Instantaneous velocity (acceleration) refers to an specific instant of time.
III.
Acceleration
v2 v1 v
=
t 2 t1 t
(2.5)
- Vector quantity
v dv d 2 x
=
=
t 0 t
dt dt 2
a = lim
(2.6)
- The instantaneous acceleration is the slope of the tangent line (v-t plot) at
a particular time. (green line in B)
- Average acceleration: blue line.
- When an objects velocity and
acceleration are in the same
direction (same sign), the object is
speeding up.
- When an objects velocity and
acceleration are in the opposite
direction, the object is slowing
down.
- Positive acceleration does not necessarily imply speeding up, and negative
acceleration slowing down.
Example (1): v1= -25m/s ; v2= 0m/s in 5s particle slows down, aavg= 5m/s2
- An object can have simultaneously v=0 and a0
Example (2): x(t)=At2 v(t)=2At a(t)=2A ; At t=0s, v(0)=0 but a(0)=2A
Example (3):
- The car is moving with constant positive velocity (red arrows maintaining
same size) Acceleration equals zero.
Example (4):
+ acceleration
+ velocity
- Velocity and acceleration are in the same direction, a is uniform (blue
arrows of same length) Velocity is increasing (red arrows are getting
longer).
Example (5):
- acceleration
+ velocity
- Acceleration and velocity are in opposite directions.
- Acceleration is uniform (blue arrows same length).
- Velocity is decreasing (red arrows are getting shorter).
IV.
v v0
t 0
( 2 .7 )
t
x x0
=
x = x 0 + v avg t
( 2 .8 )
t
v +v
at
= 0
and ( 2 . 7 ) v avg = v 0 +
2
2
( 2 . 8 ), ( 2 . 9 ) x a=xa0 == vv0 tv +
0
avg
t0
at
2
( 2 .9 )
( 2 .10 )
( 2 . 7 ), ( 2 . 10 ) v 2 = v 02 + a 2 t 2 + 2 a ( v 0 t ) = v 02 + a 2 t 2 + 2 a ( x x 0
v 2 = v 02 + 2 a ( x x 0 )
at 2
)
2
( 2 . 11 )
t missing
PROBLEMS - Chapter 2
P1. A red car and a green car move toward each other in adjacent lanes and parallel to
The x-axis. At time t=0, the red car is at x=0 and the green car at x=220 m. If the red car has
a constant velocity of 20km/h, the cars pass each other at x=44.5 m, and if it has a constant
velocity of 40 km/h, they pass each other at x=76.6m. What are (a) the initial velocity, and (b)
the acceleration of the green car?
vr2=40km/h
vr1=20km/h
3
km 1h 10 m
= 11.11m / s
40
h 3600s 1km
Xr2=76.6m
O
Xr1=44.5 m
d=220 m
44.5m
x = v t t =
= 8s
r1 r1 1
1 5.55m / s
76.6m
x = v t t2 =
= 6.9s
r2 r2 2
11.11m / s
Xg=220m
x = x +v t
r
r0 r
1
x = x + v t + at 2
g
g0 g0 2
(1)
(2)
ag = 2.1 m/s2
v0g = 13.55 m/sc
P2: At the instant the traffic light turns green, an automobile starts with a constant
acceleration a of 2.2 m/s2. At the same instant, a truck, traveling with constant speed of
9.5 m/s, overtakes and passes the automobile. (a) How far beyond the traffic signal will
the automobile overtake the truck? (b) How fast will the automobile be traveling at that
instant?
ac = 2.2 m/s2, vc0=0 m/s
t = 0s
t = 0s
x (m)
Car
Truck
x (m)
x=0
x=d ?
vt = 9.5 m/s
xT = d = vT t = 9.5 t
(1)
Truck
1
xc = d = v t + act 2 d = 0 + 0.5 (2.2m / s 2 ) t 2 = 1.1t 2 (2) Car
C0
2
P3: A proton moves along the x-axis according to the equation: x = 50t+10t2, where x is in
meters and t is in seconds. Calculate (a) the average velocity of the proton during the first 3s of
its motion.
v avg =
v (t ) =
dx
= 50 + 20 t v(3s ) = 50 + 20 3 = 110 m / s
dt
a (t ) =
dv
= 20 m / s 2 = a(3s )
dt
(d) Graph x versus t and indicate how the answer to (a) (average velocity) can be obtained
from the plot.
(e) Indicate the answer to (b) (instantaneous velocity) on
the graph.
(f) Plot v versus t and indicate on it the answer to (c).
x = 50t + 10t2
v = 50 + 20t
P4. An electron moving along the x-axis has a position given by: x = 16texp(-t) m, where t is in
seconds. How far is the electron from the origin when it momentarily stops?
x(t) when v(t)=0??
dx
= v = 16e t 16te t = 16e t (1 t )
dt
v = 0 (1 t ) = 0; (et > 0) t = 1s
x(1) = 16 / e = 5.9m
P5. When a high speed passenger train traveling at 161 km/h rounds a bend, the engineer is
shocked to see that a locomotive has improperly entered into the track from a siding and
is a distance D= 676 m ahead. The locomotive is moving at 29 km/h. The engineer of the
high speed train immediately applies the brakes. (a) What must be the magnitude of the
resultant deceleration if a collision is to be avoided? (b) Assume that the engineer is at x=0
when at t=0 he first spots the locomotive. Sketch x(t) curves representing the locomotive
and high speed train for the situation in which a collision is just avoided and is not quite
avoided.
Locomotive
Train
t = 0s
x (m)
dL
x (m)
t > 0s
x=0
x=D
x=D+dL
dL
8.05
(1)
Locomotive
1
1
d L + D = v t + aT t 2 d L + 676 = 44.72 t + aT t 2 (2) Train
T0
2
2
P5.
vTf = vT 0 + aT t = 0 aT =
44.72m / s
(44.72m / s)(8.05m / s) 360m2 / s 2
= (eq. 1) =
=
t
dL
dL
v2Tf = v 2T 0 + 2aT ( D + d L ) = 0 aT =
(44.72m / s)2
2(676m+d L )
(3)
(4)
from (1) t =
(1) + (3) aT =
dL
8.05
= 47.24s
360m2 / s 2
= 0.947m / s 2
380.3m
x L = 676 + 8 . 05 t
x T = 44 . 72 t + 0 . 5 a T t 2
- Collision can be avoided:
Train
v = v0 at t = 0 v0 = (a )(0) + C v0 = C v = v0 + at
1
dx = v dt dx = v dt dx = (v0 + at )dt dx = v0 dt + a t dt x = v0t + at 2 + C ' ;
2
1
1 2
x = x0 at t = 0 x0 = v0 (0) + a(0) + C ' x0 = C ' x = x0 + v0t + at
2
2
V.
Free fall
Approximations:
- Locally, Earths surface essentially flat free fall a has same direction
at slightly different points.
- All objects at the same place have same free fall a (neglecting air influence).
VI.
v1 v0 = a dt
t0
x1 x0 = v dt
t0
10
P6: A rocket is launched vertically from the ground with an initial velocity of 80m/s. It ascends
with a constant acceleration of 4 m/s2 to an altitude of 10 km. Its motors then fail, and the
rocket continues upward as a free fall particle and then falls back down.
(a) What is the total time elapsed from takeoff until the rocket strikes the ground?
(b) What is the maximum altitude reached?
1) Ascent a0= 4m/s2
(c) What is the velocity just before hitting ground?
y1 y0 = v t + 0.5 a0t12 104 = 80t + 2t12 t = 53.48s
01
y2=ymax
a1= -g
t2
t3=t2
a0= 4m/s2
t1
t4
v0= 80m/s
a1 = g =
a2= -g
0v1
294m / s
t2 =
= 29.96s
t2
9.8m / s 2
t0=0
v3
+v1, t1
y1= 10 km
v v
a0 = 1 0 v1 = (4m / s 2 ) (53.48s) + 80m / s = 294m / s
t1
v2=0, t2
a2 = g =
v3(v )
1 v = g t v = 531.35m / s
3
4 1
t4
11