1. use a position vs. time graph to interpret an object’s position or displacement. 2. define...

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1. Use a position vs. time graph to interpret an object’s position or displacement. 2. Define velocity. 3. Differentiate between speed and velocity.

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Page 1: 1. Use a position vs. time graph to interpret an object’s position or displacement. 2. Define velocity. 3. Differentiate between speed and velocity

1. Use a position vs. time graph to interpret an object’s position or displacement.

2. Define velocity.

3. Differentiate between speed and velocity.

Page 2: 1. Use a position vs. time graph to interpret an object’s position or displacement. 2. Define velocity. 3. Differentiate between speed and velocity

Slope is the rate of change for the object.

How far it moves in y for every x.

Slope = rise/run = change of y / change of x

Page 3: 1. Use a position vs. time graph to interpret an object’s position or displacement. 2. Define velocity. 3. Differentiate between speed and velocity

Displacement (d) or Position (p) on the y-axis

Time (t) on the x-axis

Page 4: 1. Use a position vs. time graph to interpret an object’s position or displacement. 2. Define velocity. 3. Differentiate between speed and velocity

What it is not…

A picture of the path taken by the person or object.

Going up?

Actual path was flat.

Page 5: 1. Use a position vs. time graph to interpret an object’s position or displacement. 2. Define velocity. 3. Differentiate between speed and velocity

What can a p-t graph tell you?

Instantaneous Position: Position at a particular instant (an instant lasts zero seconds).

Starting point: The y-intercept tells you the object’s starting point. If an object starts at the measuring device, then its’ y-intercept is 0. If it starts 3 meters away, then its y-intercept is 3 m.

Page 6: 1. Use a position vs. time graph to interpret an object’s position or displacement. 2. Define velocity. 3. Differentiate between speed and velocity

Intersection of 2 lines tells you when 2 objects have the same position.

What can a p-t graph tell you?

Page 7: 1. Use a position vs. time graph to interpret an object’s position or displacement. 2. Define velocity. 3. Differentiate between speed and velocity

Don’t be a dope…What about slope?

∆y

∆x

1. Pick two points on your line.

2. Subtract the y points.

3. Subtract the x points.

4. Divide the rise by the run.

Page 8: 1. Use a position vs. time graph to interpret an object’s position or displacement. 2. Define velocity. 3. Differentiate between speed and velocity

Slope of a p-t graph = Average Velocity

∆y

∆x=

∆d

∆t

v = =df - di

tf - ti

Page 9: 1. Use a position vs. time graph to interpret an object’s position or displacement. 2. Define velocity. 3. Differentiate between speed and velocity

Now, let’s look at units…

∆y

∆x=

∆d

∆t

The SI base unit for displacement is meters.

The SI base unit for time is seconds.

Therefore, units are m/s.

In other words, slope tells how many meters the object (runner) moved in 1 second.

Page 10: 1. Use a position vs. time graph to interpret an object’s position or displacement. 2. Define velocity. 3. Differentiate between speed and velocity

The absolute value of the slope of a p-t graph tells you the average speed (how fast the object is moving).

Velocity is a vector = Magnitude & Direction

Speed is a scalar = Magnitude

Page 11: 1. Use a position vs. time graph to interpret an object’s position or displacement. 2. Define velocity. 3. Differentiate between speed and velocity

Instantaneous Velocity = the speed and direction of an object at a particular instant.

Can be found by finding the tangent to a point on a position-time graph.