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DESCRIBING MOTION Motion - an object’s change in position relative to a reference point over a period of time Reference Point – an appears to stay in object place that Motion is ____________ relative to a reference point that is ______________ relevant for the situation EXAMPLE 1: Two horses are standing side by side. One of them moves. How can you tell which one has moved? Click me to see the two horses standing side by side. Click me to see the two horses after one has moved. EXAMPLE 2: Two horses are standing side by side. One of them moves. How can you tell which one has moved? Click me to see the two horses standing side by side. Click me to see the two horses after one has moved. Buildings, trees, and mountains are all useful reference points. DISTANCE Distance – how from starting far it is point to point in any stopping direction ; the total length of the path traveled End Follow all the loops Start DISPLACEMENT Displacement - measures the distance and direction starting between the position and the ending position Think: “As the bird flies” – straight line path in ONE direction. Start End DISTANCE & DISPLACEMENT DISTANCE DISPLACEMENT A D Displacement Distance C B SPEED Speed – the distance traveled divided by the amount of time EXAMPLE: A dog ran 25 miles in 5 hours. His speed is 5 miles per hour. (25 miles ÷ 5 hours) Average speed = total distance total time MOTION GRAPHS graph Motion can be plotted on a _________ with time on the horizontal axis and distance on the vertical axis. This distance-time graph shows how the distance traveled by a sprinter changed during a 100-m race. In the graph below, what was the sprinter’s average speed over the entire race? Average speed = total distance total time Avg. Sp. = 100 m 12 seconds Avg. Sp. = 8.33 m/s Here’s a Riddle: Two birds leave the same tree at the same time. They both fly at 10 km/h for 1 hour, 15 km/h for 30 minutes, and 5 km/h for 1 hour. But they don’t end up at the same place. Why not? The birds were flying in different directions! Their speed was the same, but the direction they flew was different. So, their VELOCITIES differed. VELOCITY Velocity – the measure of direction particular speed EXAMPLE: 5 miles per hour west in a ACCELERATION Acceleration – the change divided by the amount of time which the change occurs in velocity over Acceleration can take place when an object changes direction , speed , or both. FORCE Force – a push or a that has size and direction The motion of an object when a force acts on it. pull changes Force makes objects speed up, slow down, or change direction. Force causes acceleration. INERTIA Inertia – measures an object’s tendency to resist changing its motion and depends on the amount of mass an object has. INERTIA EXAMPLE 1 The more mass an object has, the greater its inertia. An elephant has more inertia than a mouse because the elephant has more mass INERTIA EXAMPLE 2 The more inertia an object has, the less effect a force has on its motion. If you kick an empty box and a full box with the same amount of force, the full box will not move as far. INERTIA EXAMPLE 3 The more inertia an object has, the harder it is to start the object moving or slow it down. Is it easier to push a Volkswagen Beetle or an 18-Wheeler Truck? BALANCED FORCES Balanced Forces – forces that cancel each other out because they are equal and acting in opposite directions. The object’s motion does not change. Both forces pushing on the box are opposite and equal. 5N 5N The object won’t move. UNBALANCED FORCES Unbalanced Forces – do each other out. NOT cancel change An object’s motion will unbalanced forces act on it. if Net force is the difference between two _______ forces. Net Force Example 15N 15 Newtons of force to the right 5N 5 Newtons of force to the left Net Force = 10 Newtons with motion to the right UNBALANCED FORCES 1000 Newtons 500 Newtons The forces shown above are PUSHING / PULLING forces . UNBALANCED FORCES 1000 Newtons 500 Newtons The forces shown above are WORKING TOGETHER / OPPOSITE FORCES. UNBALANCED FORCES 1000 Newtons 500 Newtons The forces are EQUAL / NOT EQUAL. UNBALANCED FORCES 1000 Newtons 500 Newtons The forces DO / DO NOT balance each other. UNBALANCED FORCES 1000 Newtons 500 Newtons The net force is 500N TO THE RIGHT / 500N TO THE LEFT / ZERO. UNBALANCED FORCES 1000 Newtons 500 Newtons There IS / IS NO motion. FRICTION force that exists between Friction – a two touching surfaces Friction is present in almost all motion. Friction occurs between any two surfaces that slide past each other. FRICTION Friction between the tire and the ground helps the wheels on this car turn without slipping. FRICTION Air Resistance is the pushing of ______________________ air against the surface of an object. EXAMPLE: You feel air resistance when you place your hand in the air rushing past a moving car. GRAVITY force Gravity – the that all objects with mass exert on other matter. Gravity is affected by: ______________ - amount of matter in an Mass object ______________Distance how far away an object is GRAVITY Weight the measure of the __________gravitational force between an object and the planet or moon where the object is. If you weigh 100 pounds here on Earth… …then your weight on the Moon would be 17 pounds!