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Motion in One Dimension                                    Section 3



                        What do you think?

   • Observe a metal ball being dropped from rest.
         – Describe the motion in words.
         – Sketch a velocity-time graph for this motion.
   • Observe the same ball being tossed vertically
     upward and returning to the starting point.
         – Describe the motion in words.
         – Sketch a velocity-time graph for this motion.



 © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Motion in One Dimension                             Section 3

   Free Fall
   • Assumes no air resistance
   • Acceleration is constant for the entire fall
   • Acceleration due to gravity (ag or g )
         – Has a value of -9.81 m/s2
               • Negative for downward
         – Roughly equivalent to -22 (mi/h)/s




 © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Motion in One Dimension                                                     Section 3

   Free Fall
   • For a ball tossed upward, make predictions for the sign
     of the velocity and acceleration to complete the chart.
                                                Velocity         Acceleration
                                              (+, -, or zero)   (+, -, or zero)
             When halfway                            +                -
                 up
               When at the                         zero               -
                 peak
             When halfway                            -                -
                down


 © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Motion in One Dimension                           Section 3

   Graphing Free Fall
   • Based on your present
     understanding of free fall,
     sketch a velocity-time
     graph for a ball that is
     tossed upward (assuming
     no air resistance).
         – Is it a straight line?
         – If so, what is the slope?
   • Compare your predictions
     to the graph to the right.



 © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Motion in One Dimension                                            Section 3

   Classroom Practice Problem
       A ball is thrown straight up into the air at an initial
       velocity of 25.0 m/s upward. Create a table showing the
       ball’s position, velocity and acceleration each second
       for the first 5 s.

            t (s)                     y (m)       v (m/s)   a (m/s2)
           1.00                       20.1        +15.2     -9.81
           2.00                       30.4        +5.4      -9.81
           3.00                       30.9        -4.4      -9.81
           4.00                       21.6        -14.2     -9.81
           5.00                       2.50        -24.0     -9.81


 © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Motion in One Dimension                                 Section 3



                         Now what do you think?

       Review the descriptions and graphs you created
       at the beginning of the presentation.
         – Do you want to make any modifications?
         – For the second graph, circle the point representing
           the highest point of the toss.




 © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Motion in One Dimension                                 Section 3



                         Now what do you think?

       Review the descriptions and graphs you created
       at the beginning of the presentation.
         – Do you want to make any modifications?
         – For the second graph, circle the point representing
           the highest point of the toss.




 © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

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Physics Chapter 2 Lesson 3

  • 1. Motion in One Dimension Section 3 What do you think? • Observe a metal ball being dropped from rest. – Describe the motion in words. – Sketch a velocity-time graph for this motion. • Observe the same ball being tossed vertically upward and returning to the starting point. – Describe the motion in words. – Sketch a velocity-time graph for this motion. © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
  • 2. Motion in One Dimension Section 3 Free Fall • Assumes no air resistance • Acceleration is constant for the entire fall • Acceleration due to gravity (ag or g ) – Has a value of -9.81 m/s2 • Negative for downward – Roughly equivalent to -22 (mi/h)/s © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
  • 3. Motion in One Dimension Section 3 Free Fall • For a ball tossed upward, make predictions for the sign of the velocity and acceleration to complete the chart. Velocity Acceleration (+, -, or zero) (+, -, or zero) When halfway + - up When at the zero - peak When halfway - - down © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
  • 4. Motion in One Dimension Section 3 Graphing Free Fall • Based on your present understanding of free fall, sketch a velocity-time graph for a ball that is tossed upward (assuming no air resistance). – Is it a straight line? – If so, what is the slope? • Compare your predictions to the graph to the right. © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
  • 5. Motion in One Dimension Section 3 Classroom Practice Problem A ball is thrown straight up into the air at an initial velocity of 25.0 m/s upward. Create a table showing the ball’s position, velocity and acceleration each second for the first 5 s. t (s) y (m) v (m/s) a (m/s2) 1.00 20.1 +15.2 -9.81 2.00 30.4 +5.4 -9.81 3.00 30.9 -4.4 -9.81 4.00 21.6 -14.2 -9.81 5.00 2.50 -24.0 -9.81 © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
  • 6. Motion in One Dimension Section 3 Now what do you think? Review the descriptions and graphs you created at the beginning of the presentation. – Do you want to make any modifications? – For the second graph, circle the point representing the highest point of the toss. © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
  • 7. Motion in One Dimension Section 3 Now what do you think? Review the descriptions and graphs you created at the beginning of the presentation. – Do you want to make any modifications? – For the second graph, circle the point representing the highest point of the toss. © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Editor's Notes

  1. When asking students to express their ideas, you might try one of the following methods. (1) You could ask them to write their answers in their notebook and then discuss them. (2) You could ask them to first write their ideas and then share them with a small group of 3 or 4 students. At that time you can have each group present their consensus idea. This can be facilitated with the use of whiteboards for the groups. The most important aspect of eliciting student’s ideas is the acceptance of all ideas as valid. Do not correct or judge them. You might want to ask questions to help clarify their answers. You do not want to discourage students from thinking about these questions and just waiting for the correct answer from the teacher. Thank them for sharing their ideas. Misconceptions are common and can be dealt with if they are first expressed in writing and orally. Students may not see that the ball is accelerating uniformly and, as a result, they may draw a graph that rises and then starts to level off. You might also ask them how their answers would change if you dropped a similar but lighter ball. Then, drop the two simultaneously and let them observe the motion.
  2. When presenting this slide, you may wish to refer students to Figure 14 in their textbook. You could also begin this slide with a video clip of the “feather and hammer” experiment on the moon. It is available on NASA and other web sites. Perform an internet search with the terms “feather and hammer on moon” to find a link. Discuss the effects of air resistance with students. With air resistance, an object will continue to accelerate at a smaller rate until the acceleration is zero. At that point the object has reached “terminal velocity.”
  3. When presenting this slide, you may wish to refer students to Figure 15 in their textbook. You can also demonstrate the motion for students. Toss a ball up and catch it. Ask students to focus on the spot half-way up and observe the motion at that time. They can then predict the sign for the velocity and acceleration at that point. Then ask students to focus on the peak and, finally, on a point half-way down. Often students believe the acceleration at the top is zero because the velocity is zero. Point out to them that acceleration is not velocity, but changing velocity. At the top, the velocity is changing from + to -. Ask students to explain each combination above. For example, a positive velocity (moving upward) and a negative acceleration (downward) would cause the velocity to decrease.
  4. Now students are asked to graph the motion they just observed. This graph should match the answers to the chart on the last slide. Remind them that they are graphing velocity, but acceleration is the slope of the velocity-time graph. Student graphs may have a different initial velocity and a different x -intercept (the time at which the velocity reaches zero), but their graphs should have the same shape and slope as the one given on the slide. Point out that the velocity is zero at the peak ( t = 1.1 s for this graph) while the acceleration is never zero because the slope is always negative. Help them get an approximate slope for the graph shown on the slide. It should be close to -9.81 (m/s)/s.
  5. The equations from Section 2 apply because this is uniform acceleration. Simply use “ y ” instead of “ x, ” and the acceleration is -9.81 m/s 2 . Allow students some time to get the answers for t = 1.00 s, and then show them the calculations. Then have them continue with the following rows of the table. Students can use equation (4) from the previous lecture to get y , and the second version of equation (2) to get v . Or, they could get y by using equation (1) after getting the velocity, but they must get the average before using equation (1). Point out to students that the ball turns around between the 2.00 and 3.00 second mark. This makes sense, since it starts with a velocity of 15.2 m/s and loses 9.81 m/s of it’s velocity each second (in other words, the velocity decreases by 9.8 m/s in each step).
  6. Have students revisit their original descriptions and graphs to see if they want to make any modifications based on what they have learned from the presentation. Have a discussion with students about what changes they have made, and ask them to explain why they made the changes.