One-Dimensional Motion: Displacement, Velocity, Acceleration
One-Dimensional Motion: Displacement, Velocity, Acceleration
x2 − x1 ∆ x
• Formula for average velocity:
= v =
t2 − t1 ∆t
A. 40 mph
B. 45 mph
C. 47.5 mph
Average Trip Speed
You drive 60 miles at 60 mph, then 60 miles at
30 mph. What was your average speed?
A. 40 mph
B. 45 mph
C. 47.5 mph
Total distance = 120 miles, time taken = 3 hours.
Acceleration
• Average acceleration = velocity change/time taken
v2 − v1 ∆v
= a =
t2 − t1 ∆t
• Notice that acceleration relates to change in velocity exactly as velocity relates
to change in displacement.
∆v dv
= =
a lim .
∆t →0 ∆t dt
• The acceleration at time t1 is the
v(t)
slope of the velocity graph v(t)
at that time.
O t1 t
Our Units for One-Dimensional Motion
v= v0 + at.
• Check with an example: a car traveling at 10 m/s accelerates
steadily at 2 m/s2. How fast is it going after 2 secs? After 4
secs?
Distance Moved at Constant Acceleration
• At constant acceleration,
dx
= v(t= ) v0 + at.
dt
• The solution of this equation is
x(t ) = x0 + v0t + 12 at 2 .
• Here x0 is the beginning position, v0 the beginning
velocity, a the constant acceleration.
• Exercise: check this by finding dx/dt.
More about Constant Acceleration…
• At constant acceleration,
v1
the graph of velocity as a
function of time v(t) = v0 + at v0
is a straight line: v(t)
0 t1
v0 + v1
v=
2
v02 2a ( x − x0 )
v 2 =+
These formulas are worth memorizing: the last one is simply derived
by eliminating t between the first two.
The picture below shows time (4.56 secs) and speed
(321 mph) for a standing start quarter mile at
Indianapolis.
Assuming constant acceleration, what was the
approximate horizontal g-force on the driver?
a. 0.3g
b. 0.8g
c. 1.5g
d. 3g
e. 5g