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PHYSICS 220 Lecture 03 Motion with Constant Acceleration Textbook Sections 3.1 Lecture 3 Purdue University, Physics 220 1 Exercise x (meters) 100 • • • • 0 -100 position vs. time -200 -300 0 v (m/s) 5 10 t (seconds) 15 Where is velocity zero? Where is velocity positive? Where is velocity negative? Where is speed largest? 20 20 • Where is acceleration zero? • Where is acceleration positive? 0 -20 -40 -60 velocity vs. time -80 -100 0 Lecture 3 5 10 t (seconds) 15 20 If speed is increasing, v and a are in same direction. If speed is decreasing, v and a are in opposite direction. Purdue University, Physics 220 2 Question • A skydiver is falling straight down, along the negative y direction. During the initial part of the fall, her speed increases from 16 to 28 m/s in 1.5 s. Which of the following is correct? A) v>0, a>0 v a B) v>0, a<0 C) v<0, a>0 D) v<0, a<0 correct • During a later part of the fall, after the parachute has opened, her speed decreases from 48 to 26 m/s in 11 s. Which of the following is correct? A) B) C) D) Lecture 3 v>0, a>0 v>0, a<0 v<0, a>0 v<0, a<0 correct v a Purdue University, Physics 220 4 iClicker A ball is tossed from the ground up a height of two meters above the ground and falls back down. • Draw v vs t v 3 -2 v A 3 4 t t 4 t E t Purdue University, Physics 220 4 -2 v 3 4 C 3 D -2 Lecture 3 B -2 v 3 v -2 4 t 5 Acceleration vs Time Plots • Gives acceleration at any time • Area gives change in velocity a (m/s2) 3 Acceleration at t=4, a(4) = -2 6 m/s2 Change in v between t=4 and t=1. Dv = +4 m/s t=1-3: Dv = (3m/s2)(2s) = 6 m/s 24 t (s) -3 t=3-4: Dv = (-2m/s2)(1s) = -2 m/s Lecture 2 Purdue University, Physics 220 6 Constant Acceleration • v = v0 + at • x = x0 + v0t + 1/2 at2 • v2 = v02 + 2a(x-x0) Dv = at Dx = v0t + 1/2 at2 v2 = v02 + 2a Dx x (meters) 200 150 100 50 0 1 2 x x0 v0t at 2 x x0 v t v0 v f 2 v0 (v0 Dv) Lecture 3 2 10 t (seconds) 15 20 5 10 t (seconds) 15 20 5 10 t (seconds) 15 20 20 15 10 5 2 2v0 at 1 v0 at 2 2 v 5 v (m/s) 0 v0 v f 0 0 2 a (m/s ) 2 1.5 1 2v0 at 2 0.5 0 Purdue University, Physics 220 0 7 Tossed Ball A ball is tossed from the ground up a height of two meters above the ground and falls back down. y t v • Draw v vs t • Draw y vs t • Draw a vs t t a t Lecture 3 Purdue University, Physics 220 8 Question A car accelerates uniformly from rest. If it travels a distance D in time t then how far will it travel in a time 2t? A) D/4 B) D/2 C) D D) 2D E) 4D Correct x=1/2 at2 Follow up question: If the car has speed v at time t then what is the speed at time 2t? A) v/4 B) v/2 C) v D) 2v E) 4v Lecture 3 Correct v=at Purdue University, Physics 220 9 Kinematics Example A car is traveling 30 m/s and applies its breaks to stop after a distance of 150 m. How fast is the car going after it has traveled ½ the distance (75 meters) ? A) v < 15 m/s v 2 vo2 2aDx B) v = 15 m/s C) v > 15 m/s This tells us v2 proportional to Dx v 2f vo2 302 2 3 m / s a 2(150) 2(150) 2 v75 302 2a(75) 2 v75 302 2(3)(75) Lecture 3 Purdue University, Physics 220 v75 21m / s 10 Frame of Reference • Motion is relative. • Motion can be described only after a frame of reference is chosen. • A frame of reference may be in motion with respect to other frames of reference. • The description of motion in one frame of reference may be mathematically transformed into that in another frame of reference. • In a frame of reference, different coordinate systems may be used to describe motion. Lecture 3 Purdue University, Physics 220 11 Inertial Frame of Reference Any reference frame in which Newton’s laws are valid is called an inertial frame of reference SF = ma If no net force acts on a body (FNET = 0) there is no acceleration acting on the body, i.e. it moves with constant velocity F3 F2 F1 M F4 Lecture 3 Purdue University, Physics 220 12 Newton’s Third Law For every action there is an equal an opposite reaction Forces in nature come in pairs N mg Lecture 2 Purdue University, Physics 220 13 Newton’s Second Law SF = ma F max F ma y x y Fx ax m Lecture 3 ay Fy m Purdue University, Physics 220 14 Problem Solving Recipe • Identify the object(s) of interest. • Draw the free-body diagram for each object, showing all the forces acting on it. • Choose a coordinate system. • Find the net force along each axis. • Use Newton’s second law to find the acceleration along each axis. • Find the velocity and displacement along each axis from the acceleration. Lecture 3 Purdue University, Physics 220 15 Free Body Diagrams • Isolate the object of interest • Identify all forces acting on object and represent them as vectors • Choose a coordinate system (e.g., x,y,z) Lecture 3 Purdue University, Physics 220 16 Example A tractor T is pulling a trailer M with a constant acceleration. If the forward acceleration is 1.5 m/s2, calculate the force on the trailer (m=400 kg) due to the tractor (m=500 kg). Neglect friction. x–direction Fx max T max T 400 kg y 1.5 m/s N 2 T T 600 Newtons x W Lecture 3 Purdue University, Physics 220 17 Example A tractor T (m=500 kg) is pulling a trailer M (m=400 kg). It starts from rest and pulls with constant force such that after 10 seconds it has moved 30 y meters to the right. Calculate the driving force on the tractor. x X direction: Tractor N SF = ma Fw – T = mtractora Fw = T + mtractora W X direction: Trailer SF = ma T = mtrailera Lecture 3 T T N Fw W Combine: Fw = mtrailera + mtractora Fw = (mtrailer + mtractor ) a Purdue University, Physics 220 18 Example A tractor T (m=500 kg) is pulling a trailer M (m=400 kg). It starts from rest and pulls with constant force such that after 10 seconds it has moved 30 y meters to the right. Calculate the driving force on the tractor. x Combine: Fw = mtrailera + mtractora Fw = (mtrailer + mtractor ) a Acceleration: Dx = v0t +0.5 a t2 a = 2 Dx / t2 = 0.6 m/s2 Lecture 3 N W T T N Fw W FW=900kg0.6m/s2 FW = 540 Newtons Purdue University, Physics 220 19 iClicker If an object is acted on by two finite constant forces, is it possible for the object to move at constant velocity? A) B) C) D) E) Lecture 3 No, it will accelerate Yes, the forces must be perpendicular No, it will follow a curved path Yes, the forces must be equal and opposite Yes, the forces must be in the same direction Purdue University, Physics 220 20