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title, date
| title | date |
|---|---|
| Vectors and Kinematics | 2024-08-19 |
One must always start a study into the heavily crippled IB editions of the glorious subject of Physics with the initial understanding that the road ahead lead to pain immeasurable.
-> Prime of the Faith
Motion in 1D
In this rendering of motion, you will never need to use vector quantities to describe movement due to the scalar nature of all quantities discussed.
Reference Frames and Displacement
- Any measurement about motion is taken in terms of a reference frame.
Note
Example: A train that moves with respect to the ground being held stationary, is not moving with respect to a stationary person inside that train. If a person were to walk, at let's say
5km/s toward the back of the train while it moves forward at80km/h, the person is moving at75km/h with respect to the stationary ground.
- In one dimension, only one axis, the $x$-axis of a coordinate plane is used.
- the net distance an object has traveled is known as displacement
- total distance is the overall distance traveled by the object/particle regardless of reference frame or initial/final positions
- change in positions is described using
\Delta x
Average Velocity
It is important to note that this equation was derived from the more complicated calculus variant of the velocity equation. There are 2 important terms here.
\text{average speed}=\frac{\text{distance traveled}}{\text{time elapsed}}=\frac{\Delta x}{\Delta t}
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