You should also have a a feeling that much of our motion is not at one speed. We are often accelerating (+ or -), even when we are trying to maintain one speed on the road.
Let's talk about those straight lines first...
Speed=distance/time, OUR GRAPHS show us these two things,
so they can give us speed.
If you find the slope of the line
(slope=steepness, or grade, etc.) you find the speed.
Look at this example...
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This image shows motion at a constant speed. |
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The speed is given by the slope of the line. Slope is defined as DY/DX and in our case, it's Ddistance/Dtime. Here, I drew a triangle on the graph using two points on the line. So, X=3-1=2 and Y=3-1=2, so 2/2=1block/second |
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The speed here is higher.
You can tell because the line is steeper.What
is the speed?
(4-0)/(2-0)=2blocks/second |
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| Here, the line doesn't nicely line up with the gridlines, so we must think just a little more...(see below) |
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(4-0)/(3.5-0)=1.14blocks/sec |
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Lecture OnLine and complete the problem in ch1 called "slope steps".