🚲 Imagine you're on a bicycle, cycling along a straight path. Let's use this story to understand distance-time, velocity-time, and acceleration.
Now, let's convert this fun ride into scientific knowledge!
Acceleration
The gradient (slope) of a velocity-time graph gives acceleration. The direction of the slope tells you which direction you're accelerating.
From 45s to 50s: You slowed from 4ms-1 to 0, so the acceleration was
(final speed - initial speed) / time taken = \( \frac {(0 - 4)}{ 5}\) = -0.80ms-2
From 90s to 120s: Your speed change over time gave you an acceleration of
\(\frac {speed\ change}{time\ taken}\) = \( \frac{3.0}{30} \) = 0.10ms-2
Note: If the gradient of the graph is positive, the acceleration is also positive. That means, if you're slowing down while moving in the negative direction (like our bike ride back), a force is acting on you in the positive direction, slowing you down.
Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Physics SL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟
🚲 Imagine you're on a bicycle, cycling along a straight path. Let's use this story to understand distance-time, velocity-time, and acceleration.
Now, let's convert this fun ride into scientific knowledge!
Acceleration
The gradient (slope) of a velocity-time graph gives acceleration. The direction of the slope tells you which direction you're accelerating.
From 45s to 50s: You slowed from 4ms-1 to 0, so the acceleration was
(final speed - initial speed) / time taken = \( \frac {(0 - 4)}{ 5}\) = -0.80ms-2
From 90s to 120s: Your speed change over time gave you an acceleration of
\(\frac {speed\ change}{time\ taken}\) = \( \frac{3.0}{30} \) = 0.10ms-2
Note: If the gradient of the graph is positive, the acceleration is also positive. That means, if you're slowing down while moving in the negative direction (like our bike ride back), a force is acting on you in the positive direction, slowing you down.
Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Physics SL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟