Kinematics: Description of Motion
Scalar quantity - a quantity with only magnitude, or size. A scalar has only a numerical value, such as 160 km or 100 mi
Speed - rate at which distance is traveled.
Instantaneous speed - a quantity that tells how fast something is moving at a particular instant of time
Displacement - the straight-line distance between two points, along with the direction from the starting point to the final position
Vector quantity - a quantity with magnitude AND direction.
Velocity - how fast something is moving and in which direction it is moving
Average velocity - displacement divided by the total travel time
Acceleration - the time rate of change of velocity
Average acceleration - change in velocity divided by the time taken to make the change
- Distance
- Time
- Mass
- Temperature
Speed - rate at which distance is traveled.
- Average speed = distance d traveled divided by the total time Δt elapsed in traveling that distance
- is scalar
- SI unit: m/s (meters per second)
Instantaneous speed - a quantity that tells how fast something is moving at a particular instant of time
Displacement - the straight-line distance between two points, along with the direction from the starting point to the final position
- can have either positive or negative values
- Δx = x[sub]2[/sub] − x[sub]1[/sub]; x[sub]2[/sub] and x[sub]1[/sub] indicate the initial and final positions, respectively
Vector quantity - a quantity with magnitude AND direction.
- ex. displacement of an airplane is 25 km north
- Velocity
- Acceleration
Velocity - how fast something is moving and in which direction it is moving
Average velocity - displacement divided by the total travel time
Acceleration - the time rate of change of velocity
Average acceleration - change in velocity divided by the time taken to make the change