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Physics: Graphs Tell Stories, and Stories Tell Us Equations 11 Views
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Description:
Graphs tell stories, and stories tell us equations. We hope graphs choose a good story to tell us...maybe Harry Potter, or something.
Transcript
- 00:01
No grafs tell stories and stories tell us equations Okay
- 00:06
using graphs to tell a story that's Pleasant feeling that's
- 00:13
What stories Dad in the matter A lot of math
- 00:21
Okay Equations instead Action movie equation Yeah Okay who didn't
- 00:31
love story time when they were a kid Who indeed
Full Transcript
- 00:35
you'd gather around have your mom or dad or your
- 00:38
teacher read from a picture book and they'd hold up
- 00:41
the pages so you could see the illustrations everyone would
- 00:44
Who and ah and physics is just like that Okay
- 00:50
there may be a few small differences but think of
- 00:53
grafts They tell us stories through pictures We just need
- 00:56
to know how to read them If you've been following
- 00:59
along with our course so far you've already seen a
- 01:02
bunch of displacement versus time Graphs like this one Displacement
- 01:06
versus time gives us information about velocity versus time And
- 01:10
in the same way velocity versus time tells us about
- 01:13
the acceleration versus time But rather than just yammer on
- 01:17
about it let's see what story this graph is telling
- 01:20
us What do we see here We see something that
- 01:24
starts moving picks up speed then slows down What story
- 01:28
could we think of that fits this Sure there are
- 01:31
a lot of situations to choose from That would match
- 01:33
this like a car going from one stop Sign to
- 01:35
another Although the car would probably be going faster than
- 01:38
this What if uncle frank decides to relive his roller
- 01:42
disco glory years The seventies were a crazy groovy time
- 01:47
Now frank isn't the king of the roller rink like
- 01:49
he used to be So when he comes to a
- 01:51
hill he's just gonna roll with it literally he's not
- 01:55
going to add any force He's just going to pray
- 01:58
he doesn't fracture his pelvis We'll be observing him helping
- 02:01
the video of disco uncle goes viral so we'll say
- 02:05
frank is rolling in the positive direction away from us
- 02:08
He rolls down the hill for about two point five
- 02:11
meters when he starts going up the next hill which
- 02:14
means he slows down of course and he stops after
- 02:18
ten seconds five meters away from the us Sure that
- 02:22
story where it's great for those graph Maybe not so
- 02:24
great for frank though And what does this graph tell
- 02:27
us about velocity over time Well since the overall slope
- 02:31
of the line is upwards the velocity will be positive
- 02:34
And since this is a curved line the velocity isn't
- 02:37
constant It changes throughout the time period So if we
- 02:41
were to plot out a velocity versus time graph It
- 02:43
would look like this Frankie starts out at zero meters
- 02:48
per second preaches a max of one meter per second
- 02:51
and then gravity kicks in and slows him down until
- 02:54
it's back teo zero meters per second Before we go
- 02:57
onto acceleration let's look at the slope of the velocity
- 03:00
graph more carefully And let's Think about what it means
- 03:03
for acceleration We can see that the slope is constant
- 03:07
and positive from zero to five seconds then abruptly changes
- 03:12
to constant and negative in the five to ten second
- 03:15
region That abrupt change of five seconds tells us that
- 03:19
is the moment when the acceleration was not uniform In
- 03:22
other words acceleration changes at five seconds as we're sure
- 03:26
you mutter in your sleep these days acceleration is the
- 03:30
change in velocity divided by the change in time Yep
- 03:34
That equation looks pretty familiar So for the first part
- 03:37
of the velocity graph the outboard part we would figure
- 03:41
out the acceleration like this Well look at the change
- 03:44
in velocity from second zero two second four Why aren't
- 03:48
we going all the way to the top two second
- 03:50
five Because we already know that the acceleration at that
- 03:54
time is zero that's the transition point So in that
- 03:58
four second time span the velocity goes from zero meters
- 04:01
per second Two zero point eight meters per second We
- 04:05
divide that change in velocity by that change in time
- 04:09
to find that our acceleration for the first four seconds
- 04:12
And when we do the math we find that the
- 04:15
acceleration is a constant point Two meters per second squared
- 04:19
let's Slap that sucker on the acceleration versus time graph
- 04:23
Let's look at the other part That part has the
- 04:26
downward slope A second six through ten Another four seconds
- 04:31
Man at second ten our velocity is zero meters per
- 04:35
second at second Six it's point eight meters per second
- 04:40
giving us a change of negative point Eight meters per
- 04:42
second Divide that by the change in time which gives
- 04:46
us an acceleration of negative point Two meters per second
- 04:50
squared Well pop that on the graft too So right
- 04:53
now our graph looks a little dysfunctional huh A little
- 04:56
disconnected like us before our first cup of coffee So
- 05:00
let's fix that by adding the point at the five
- 05:03
second mark where The acceleration is zero Then we can
- 05:07
connect our two horizontal lines much better Looking at that
- 05:11
disconnected graff was making us itch It's a super important
- 05:15
to keep the time when the acceleration is changing out
- 05:18
of both the before and after pictures Think of what
- 05:21
would happen if we looked at zero through five then
- 05:24
five through ten then at the five second point we'd
- 05:27
have a vertical line Ah vertical line on a time
- 05:30
graph is bad Very very bad acceleration is change in
- 05:35
velocity over change in time if there's no change in
- 05:39
time that means we'd be dividing by zero And as
- 05:42
we were all taught in math class when you divide
- 05:44
by zero you open a portal to hell that swallows
- 05:48
the universe in a fury apocalypse Ok it's not quite
- 05:52
that bad but she can't divide something by nothing It's
- 05:55
nonsensical and in math terms is considered undefined And if
- 06:00
you have a vertical line on an acceleration vs the
- 06:02
time graph that would mean that the acceleration was infinite
- 06:07
Which just know nope Uh uh not gonna happen So
- 06:13
graph carefully when acceleration is changing So displacement velocity and
- 06:17
acceleration are all related part of one big happy family
- 06:22
let's take a look at some ways to work with
- 06:24
them Time for some equations We've already looked at some
- 06:29
basic equations Displacement equals final position minus the original position
- 06:34
Velocity equals the change in displacement over a period of
- 06:38
time Acceleration is the change in velocity over a change
- 06:42
in time But how about this bad boy What the
- 06:46
heck is is trying to say let's Break it down
- 06:49
x final is our final displacement wherever we've ended up
- 06:54
in other words x sub zero is our initial displacement
- 06:58
also known as where we started out these sub zero
- 07:01
is our initial velocity and t stands for time so
- 07:05
this is initial velocity multiplied by the elapsed time a
- 07:10
is acceleration pretty standard Auntie is still time But in
- 07:14
this part we square it so putting it all together
- 07:17
our final displacement equals our initial displacement plus our initial
- 07:22
velocity times the time period plus one half acceleration times
- 07:28
time squared Now you may look at this See all
- 07:33
those variables and want to crawl under your desk and
- 07:35
die We get it But all those variables are a
- 07:38
good thing because it means that if we have enough
- 07:41
info we can solve for the initial velocity initial or
- 07:45
final displacement time or acceleration Look at that versatility That's
- 07:50
like the swiss army knife of equations How about this
- 07:54
one This says that the final displacement minus the initial
- 07:58
displacement equals the final velocity minus the starting velocity divided
- 08:03
by two multiplied by the elapsed time So to put
- 08:08
it another way the change in displacement equals the average
- 08:11
velocity multiplied by the elapsed time so we can know
- 08:15
how far we went If we have our average velocity
- 08:18
and a clock that could definitely come in handy But
- 08:22
what if we don't have the time Well we always
- 08:25
have the time for math But what if no one
- 08:27
was watching the clock So we don't know how much
- 08:30
time passed Good news there's An equation we can use
- 08:33
in that situation Here it is Let's Break this one
- 08:37
down The final velocity squared equals the initial velocity also
- 08:42
squared two times acceleration times the difference between the final
- 08:48
displacement and the initial displacement which is also known as
- 08:52
the change in displacement This cuts the time right out
- 08:55
and lets us solve for the initial or final displacement
- 08:59
initial or final velocity and acceleration How do we know
- 09:03
which equation to use We take attendance that's How Just
- 09:07
like in class for these kinds of questions we've only
- 09:10
got six variables that we're going to run into We've
- 09:14
got the displacement brothers that's initial and final displacement and
- 09:18
the velocity twins initial and final there too Then we've
- 09:22
got acceleration and last but not least time no relation
- 09:26
between those two look through the question see which variables
- 09:30
were given and which we need to solve for So
- 09:33
if both displacements both velocities and acceleration are all present
- 09:37
and time isn't mentioned we'll pick the right equation for
- 09:40
the job and sometimes we might need more than one
- 09:43
equation like if there are different kinds of motion that
- 09:47
the car is at a stop sign accelerates then cruises
- 09:50
on the freeway for a while If we want to
- 09:52
know the total displacement we'll need an equation that describes
- 09:55
this displacement during the acceleration un equation that tells us
- 09:59
the final velocity and the one that tells us how
- 10:02
far the car went at that velocity or what if
- 10:05
we have a case of two moving objects like the
- 10:08
old classic of two trains if we have a train
- 10:11
going from chicago to detroit and another going from detroit
- 10:14
to chicago will need different equations for each to figure
- 10:18
out when they're going to crash Come on just having
- 10:21
them past each other is so boring So how does
- 10:24
this whole taking attendance thing work Exactly Let's see it
- 10:27
in action say we've got a superhero situation since we're
- 10:31
always staying on brand let's call her shmoop er woman
- 10:35
she's just chillin up on a roof when she hears
- 10:37
a distress call she takes off running thirty meters to
- 10:40
the end of the roof She hits the edge of
- 10:42
the roof and takes flight When she gets to the
- 10:45
end she has a velocity of five meters per second
- 10:49
How long does this sprint taker to cover those thirty
- 10:52
meters time for attendance Unnatural displacement here there mary is
- 10:58
And just because he's zero doesn't mean he's worthless What
- 11:01
about the final displacement Yep Thirty meters right Their initial
- 11:05
velocity Bingo Zero meters per second Final velocity That's definitely
- 11:11
showed up five meters per second acceleration Uh acceleration Anyone
- 11:17
sane acceleration Uh yes acceleration is out sick How about
- 11:22
time Oh yeah That's what we're trying to figure out
- 11:25
so which equation should be used Let's look at some
- 11:28
of our options since acceleration isn't involved we don't want
- 11:32
any equation with an a so we can scratch the
- 11:36
acceleration equation off the list and we can also scratch
- 11:39
captain versatile off also the big one with all the
- 11:42
variables we could use it but we'd have to calculate
- 11:45
acceleration first So let's look at something simpler This one
- 11:49
requires us to find the average velocity first again Sounds
- 11:53
like extra work and we know we don't want this
- 11:55
velocity equation It's whole thing is that it doesn't involve
- 12:00
time That leaves us with this equation Remember this one
- 12:04
final displacement minus initial displacement equals final velocity minus initial
- 12:10
velocity divided by two times the time that's got everything
- 12:16
we need Okay first of all let's isolate t that
- 12:20
is what we're trying to solve After all let's get
- 12:23
algebraic on It will start by multiplying both sides by
- 12:27
two so now we've got two times the difference in
- 12:29
displacement equals the difference in velocity times time one more
- 12:34
step to get t all by itself divide both sides
- 12:37
by the change in velocity Leaving us with this time
- 12:43
equals two times the difference in displacement over the difference
- 12:47
in velocity Let's start putting in the Numbers the final
- 12:50
displacement was 30 meters and the initial displacement was zero
- 12:54
meters so those go there and the final velocity was
- 12:58
five meters per second with an initial velocity of zero
- 13:02
meters per second So we'll pop that in right there
- 13:06
we won't actually do the whole subtracting zero from numbers
- 13:09
thing we think he can handle that just fine so
- 13:12
we have sixty meters on top and five meters per
- 13:15
second on the bottom sixty divided by five is twelve
- 13:18
and when we look at the units the meter's cancel
- 13:21
out leaving us with a time of twelve seconds and
- 13:25
shmoop er woman saves the day again A lot of
- 13:28
math is like telling a story we've got your beginning
- 13:31
when you get all the numbers and what to solve
- 13:33
for then you've got your middle where you make any
- 13:35
rearrangements and do the math and at the end you
- 13:38
got your answer but will grant you that meth is
- 13:41
in the most Popular story to tell You'll probably see
- 13:43
a superhero movie in the next few months But equations
- 13:48
Those aren't quite ready for the big screen yet Bring 00:13:50.818 --> [endTime] it back
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