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Concepts of Motion and Kinematics: Structured Study Notes

Study Guide - Smart Notes

Tailored notes based on your materials, expanded with key definitions, examples, and context.

Concepts of Motion

Trajectory and Motion

The trajectory is the path along which an object moves, which may be straight or curved. Motion is defined as the change of an object's position with time, always measured relative to a reference point. An object's position is its directed distance from this reference point, and movement is said to occur when the position changes.

Motion Diagrams

Motion diagrams are composite photos or sketches showing an object's position at several equally spaced instants of time. They are essential tools for visualizing motion and understanding how an object's position changes over time.

  • Uniform motion: The object moves with constant speed, and the spacing between positions is equal.

  • Non-uniform motion: The spacing between positions changes, indicating acceleration or deceleration.

Motion diagram of a car moving past a tree Motion diagram showing equal time intervals between car positions Motion diagram of a skateboarder Motion diagram of a sprinter accelerating Motion diagram of a car slowing down

The Particle Model

Point Particle Approximation

Objects undergoing purely translational motion (no rotation) can be modeled as point particles. This simplifies analysis by concentrating all mass at a single point and ignoring effects such as shape change and rotation.

Motion diagram of a rocket launch Motion diagram of a car stopping

Coordinate Systems and Position

Establishing a Coordinate System

To describe motion quantitatively, a coordinate system is established:

  • Origin: The reference point for position measurements.

  • Axes: Typically, the x-axis points right and the y-axis points upward.

  • Scale: Units for measurement (meters, seconds, etc.).

Each point in space is specified by its x and y coordinates. The orientation and placement of axes can be chosen to simplify problem-solving.

Time Measurement

  • Clock reading: The actual time shown on a clock.

  • Time interval: The difference between two clock readings.

Vectors and Displacement

Position Vector

The position vector is an arrow drawn from the origin to the object's position. It is a vector quantity, described by both magnitude and direction.

Position vector and coordinate system

Displacement

Displacement is the change in position of an object and is a vector quantity. It depends only on the initial and final positions, not on the path taken or the coordinate system.

Displacement vector for Sam walking northeast Displacement vector unaffected by choice of origin

Vector Representation

  • Vectors are denoted by an arrow above the letter (e.g., ) or boldface.

  • The magnitude of a vector is its length and is always non-negative.

  • Graphically, vectors are represented as arrows; the length corresponds to magnitude, and the direction indicates the vector's direction.

Vector Addition and Subtraction

Vectors can be added or subtracted graphically using the tip-to-tail method:

  • Addition: Place the tail of the second vector at the tip of the first, then draw the resultant from the tail of the first to the tip of the second.

  • Subtraction: Add the negative of the vector to be subtracted.

Tip-to-tail method for vector addition Vector subtraction and zero vector Tip-to-tail method for vector subtraction

Speed, Velocity, and Acceleration

Speed and Velocity

  • Average speed:

  • Average velocity:

Motion diagram with displacement vectors

Relating Position to Velocity

  • The displacement vector points in the same direction as the velocity vector .

  • Final position can be found using .

Position and velocity vectors for a moving ball

Motion Diagrams: Velocity and Acceleration

  • Velocity vectors are drawn between position dots; their length represents speed.

  • Acceleration vectors are drawn between velocity vectors; they indicate changes in velocity.

Motion diagram of the tortoise racing the hare Motion diagram of a car accelerating up a hill

Acceleration

Average acceleration is defined as the ratio of the change in velocity to the time taken:

  • Acceleration arises whenever velocity changes, either in magnitude, direction, or both.

Velocity and acceleration vectors Finding the acceleration vector Finding the acceleration vector, stepwise

Sign of Position, Velocity, and Acceleration

Determining Signs in One-Dimensional Motion

  • The sign of position (x or y) tells us where an object is relative to the origin.

  • The sign of velocity (vx or vy) tells us which direction the object is moving.

  • The sign of acceleration (ax or ay) tells us which way the acceleration vector points, not whether the object is speeding up or slowing down.

Sign of position, velocity, and acceleration

Speeding Up and Slowing Down

  • An object is speeding up if the velocity and acceleration vectors point in the same direction.

  • An object is slowing down if the velocity and acceleration vectors point in opposite directions.

  • Velocity is constant if the acceleration vector is zero.

Speeding up and slowing down in one-dimensional motion

Position-versus-Time Graphs

Graphical Representation of Motion

Position-versus-time graphs plot position on the vertical axis and time on the horizontal axis. These graphs are useful for visualizing how an object's position changes over time.

Position-versus-time graph Position-versus-time graph for a real object

Interpreting Position-versus-Time Graphs

  • Discrete points show position at specific instants.

  • Continuous curves show position at all instants.

  • The slope of the graph at any point gives the object's velocity.

Summary Table: Key Concepts in Motion

Concept

Definition

Vector/Scalar

Position

Location relative to reference point

Vector

Displacement

Change in position

Vector

Distance

Total path length traveled

Scalar

Speed

Rate of distance traveled

Scalar

Velocity

Rate of displacement

Vector

Acceleration

Rate of change of velocity

Vector

Additional info: Academic context and explanations have been expanded to ensure completeness and clarity for exam preparation.

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