Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An...

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Chapter 1

Transcript of Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An...

Page 1: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Chapter 1

Page 2: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Bell WorkDraw pictures to represent the motion

described in these two scenarios.

1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to right.

2. A hiker walks from the beginning to the end of a hiking path.

Page 3: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

1/25/12 - How do you describe the location of an object? Choose an object in the classroom that is easy

to see Without pointing to, describing, or naming the

object, write down directions for your partner to find the object.

Trade papers with your partner and see if they can find your object. If your partner cannot find the object do not tell them what it is instead rewrite the directions and have your partner try again.

Page 4: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Answer these questions on the back of your piece of paper.1. Was your partner able to find your

object on the first try? Second try?

2. What difficulties did you have in writing down the directions?

3. What difficulties did you have in trying to follow your partner’s directions?

4. What kind of information must you give another person when you are trying to describe a location?

Page 5: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Force and Motion 1.1 Notes

Page 6: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

position the location of a place or object

Each time you identify the position of an object, you are comparing the location of the object with the location of another object or place.

Why do you need to use two locations to describe the position of an object?

Page 7: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Describing a position What are two ways that you could describe the

location of a city?

Reference point – a location to which you compare other locations

Longitude and latitude system – locations are given by two numbers longitude (how many degrees east or west it is from the prime meridian) and latitude (how many degrees north or south it is from the equator)

Page 8: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Measuring distance

What unit do scientists use to measure distance?

A meter

There are two ways to measure distance1. Straight line distance

2. Total length of a path taken between two positions

Page 9: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

How do you know that motion has occurred? There is a distance between starting and

ending positions of an object. Motion – the change of position over time Below, while jumping, the athlete’s horizontal

and vertical positions change.

Page 10: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Describing motion

The speed of a moving object is a measure of how quickly or slowly the object changes a position.Compare the motion of a fast moving object

to a slow moving object in a given amount of time.

The way in which an object moves can change.Discuss the movement of a raft in the water.

Page 11: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Relative Motion

How an observer sees your motion depends on how it compares with his own motion.

Frame of reference – motion is described by the location of the observer

See page 13 relative motion on a school bus

Page 12: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Bell Work1. What information do you need to describe an

object’s location?

2. Describe how your position changes as you jump over an object.

3. Kyle walks 3 blocks south from his home to school, and Jana walks 2 blocks north from her home to Kyle’s home. How far and in what direction is the school from Jana’s home?

Page 13: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Bell Work Please use complete sentences1. If you sit in a moving bus and toss a coin

straight up into the air, where will it land?

2. What is a reference point?

3. What is a position?

4. What is motion?

Page 14: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Motion 1.2 Notes

Speed – a measure of how fast something moves or the distance it moves, in a given amount of time

Rate – the way in which one quantity changes compared to another quantity

Speed is the rate at which the distance an object moves changes compared to time

Page 15: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Calculating Speed To calculate speed you need to know 2

measurements1. Distance

2. Time

Speed = distance S = d

time t

Standard unit is meters/second (m/s) Also given in kilometers/hour (km/hr) US – miles/hour (mi/h or mph) 1mph = 0.45m/s

Page 16: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Practice Calculating Speed

1. A wheelchair racer completes a 100-meter course in 20 seconds. What is his speed?

Speed = 5 meters/second

2. A man runs 200 meters in 25 seconds. What is his speed?

S = 8 m/s

3. If you travel 100 m in 50 s, what is your speed? S = 2 m/s

Page 17: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Bell WorkDO NOT TOUCH THE COMPUTERS!!

Be sure to show all of your work!!

1. What is the definition for speed in your own words?

2. What is the speed of an object that travels 15 meters in 3 seconds.

3. What is the speed of an object that travels 120 miles in 2 hours.

Page 18: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Average speed Speed is not constant. For example, when you run, you might slow

down to pace yourself, or speed up to win a race.

At each point you are running, you have a specific speed.

Instantaneous speed – moment-to-moment speed

Average speed over a distance is a lot easier to calculate than instantaneous speed

Page 19: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Distance-Time Graph

Used to show the motion of an object by using a graph that plots the distance the object has traveled against time

See page 20-21

Page 20: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Bell WorkRound to the nearest hundredth and show all of your work!!

1. What is the average speed of a person that runs 22 miles in 3 hours?

2. What is the average speed of a lion if it goes 750 meters in the first 100 seconds then rests for 20 seconds then runs 1250 meters in 80 seconds?

3. A plane travels from St. Louis to Florida in 2.5 hours. The distance from St. Louis to Florida is about 700 miles. What is the planes average speed?

Page 21: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Velocity – a speed in a specific direction

2 people moving at the same speed but opposite directions have different velocities

2 people moving in the same direction but at different speeds have different velocities

2 people moving in the same direction and at the same speed have the same velocities

Page 22: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Vector – a quantity that has both size and direction

Is speed a vector? No, because speed is a measure of how fast or

slow an object moves, not which direction it moves in.

Is velocity a vector? Yes, because velocity has a size – the speed –

and a direction, so it has a vector quantity.

Page 23: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Practice drawing vectors

Draw vectors representing the movement of the following ant.

1. The ant moves right at 1 m/s

2. The ant moves upward at 2 m/s

3. The ant moves right at 0.5 m/s

4. The ant moves downward at 1 m/s

Page 24: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Average velocity – depends on the total distance you have traveled

Suppose you are playing catch with a friend. You throw the ball to your friend at 2 m/s in a north direction. Your friend throws the ball back to you at 2 m/s in a south direction.

1. Draw vectors to represent this.

2. What is the average speed of the ball?

3. What is the average velocity of the ball?

Page 25: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Velocity vs. Speed

Make a Venn diagram comparing and contrasting speed and velocity.

Page 26: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Bell WorkWrite each of these statements on your bell work

sheet then decide if they are true or false. If false, change them so they are true.

1. A distance-time graph shows how speed changes with time.

2. Speed is a vector.

3. Average speed is total distance multiplied by total time.

Page 27: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Motion 1.3 Notes

Acceleration – a measure of how quickly the velocity is changing.

Acceleration = final velocity – initial velocity

time

Page 28: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Practice calculating accelerationAma starts sliding with a velocity of 1 m/s.

After 3 s, her velocity is 7 m/s. What is Ama’s acceleration?

Page 29: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

More practice

A man walking at 10 m/s accelerates to a velocity of 12 m/s in 2 s. What is his acceleration?

A train traveling at 10 m/s slows down to a complete stop in 20 s. What is the acceleration of the train?

Page 30: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

More practice

A car starts a race and after 20 s is traveling at a velocity of 100 m/s. What is the acceleration of the car?

Page 31: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Bell work – show all work!1. If you traveled 200 m in 50 seconds, then 100 m

in 30 seconds, then stopped for 5 seconds, and finished by sprinting 80 m in 5 seconds, what is your average speed?

2. A sprinter starts a race at 5 m/s then 10 seconds later he finishes the race at 10 m/s. What is the acceleration of the runner?

Page 32: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Bell WorkPlease show your work.

1. A cheetah runs 90 meters in 3 seconds. What is the cheetah’s speed?

2. How long would it take an object traveling 12 m/s to go 60 m?

3. A car traveling at 15 m/s slows down to a complete stop in 30 s. What is the acceleration of the car?

Page 33: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Bell Work

Pg 35 #8-15

Please write only the number and the answers on your bell work paper we will be grading this

Page 34: Chapter 1. Bell Work Draw pictures to represent the motion described in these two scenarios. 1. An ant crawls across the top of your shoe, from left to.

Bell Work

1. What is speed? (write the definition and formula)

2. What is velocity?

3. What is acceleration? (write the definition and formula)