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Physics: More Fun with Vector Components 11 Views
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Description:
Time to have more fun with vector components! What's that? You've never had any fun with vector components? Huh...then...time to spend more time with vector components!
Transcript
- 00:02
Putting it all together: more fun with vector components we say fun with
- 00:08
vector component that's like fun....
- 00:20
all right story time yeah I'll do that
- 00:26
okay time to take a break from vectors and hit the slopes just glide down a [Man skiing on the slopes]
- 00:31
mountain letting gravity do all the work moving horizontally and vertically in a
Full Transcript
- 00:35
diagonal direction, uh-oh sounds like a two-dimensional vector doesn't it make
- 00:40
sense skiing is a lot like that experiment Galileo did the one where he [Galileo skiing down a mountain]
- 00:45
discovered the force of gravity by rolling a ball down a ramp a bunch of
- 00:48
times except with skiing we don't have some old Italian guy timing us with a
- 00:52
water clock and like we said gravity will be the force that's sending us
- 00:56
downhill sadly our jet-powered skis haven't been [Man with jet-powered skis appears]
- 00:59
delivering us yet so there won't be any horizontal acceleration just vertical
- 01:03
however because we'll be going down on an incline aren't we're all velocity
- 01:08
magnitude will be increasing but hold on we're really awesome at skiing so we'd [Man performs ski jump]
- 01:14
be doing all sorts of radical jumps and stuff right and it would throw off all
- 01:18
the math so instead we'll be observing the motion of our buddy Rex
- 01:23
Tyrannosaurus Rex yeah he's a newbie to this winter wonderland so he'll just [T-Rex skiing down mountain]
- 01:27
hope to stay upright.... so let's say t-rex is going down a mountainside and
- 01:36
for the sake of simplicity we'll say this is a completely frictionless
- 01:40
ice-covered hill and we'll put the hill in an angle of 40 degrees you know what
- 01:45
Rex's speed went from 200 meters from the ski lift, first things first we
- 01:50
know the total distance along this diagonal yeah Rex just keep skiing
- 01:56
and we know the angle of incline well do we have enough to calculate the velocity
- 02:03
well the best equation to use would be this one it tells us that the square of [Equation of velocity appears]
- 02:07
the final velocity equals the square of the initial velocity plus two times the
- 02:12
acceleration times the distance well the initial velocity will be zero and the
- 02:17
distance will be 200 meters but we don't have the acceleration let's take care of
- 02:22
that problem right now as the Italian stallion
- 02:26
Galileo himself taught us acceleration down an incline equals the force of [Galileo appears galloping on a horse]
- 02:31
gravity times the sine of the angle of inclination well the acceleration of
- 02:37
gravity is 9.8 meters per second squared just like always when we multiply that
- 02:42
times the sine of 40 degrees we get an acceleration of six point three meters
- 02:45
per second squared which is a lot of acceleration for a nine-ton reptile okay
- 02:51
now we can use that velocity equation we looked at before since the initial
- 02:55
velocity is zero the square of the final velocity equals two times the
- 02:59
acceleration times the distance well doing that math gives us two thousand
- 03:03
five hundred twenty meters per second ah but we need to find the square root of
- 03:06
that number to be able to find the final velocity while taking the square root
- 03:11
gives us a final velocity of fifty point two meters per second but there might be
- 03:15
a little problem remember when we said Rex was new to this whole skiing thing [People skiing and T-Rex appears]
- 03:20
and that he's super big yeah he's not gonna be stopping anytime soon in fact
- 03:25
it looks like he's gonna go over the edge of the mountain which would be [T-Rex falls off edge of mountain]
- 03:28
about 12 meter fall before he hits the ground below so what's the speed at the
- 03:33
bottom of this tumble well in this case the initial velocity is definitely not
- 03:37
zero after all we just figured out that our big friend was going fifty point two
- 03:41
meters per second and since this is a vector quantity it needs a direction as
- 03:46
well that direction was 40 degrees but we need to break that velocity down into
- 03:50
its vertical and horizontal components and yep we're getting triggy with it all
- 03:54
right so if we put this on a graph we can see that we have a right triangle
- 03:57
here and the velocity that we calculated is the hypotenuse of that triangle [Triangle appears on graph]
- 04:02
hypotenuse that thing right there since we know the incline angle we can use
- 04:06
trig functions to find out the magnitude of the component velocities which make
- 04:11
up the other sides of this triangle, time for for sohcahtoa
- 04:15
...... it's not an island in the South
- 04:21
Pacific it's how we remember our primary trig functions well the soh when
- 04:26
sohcahtoa reminds us that the sine of an angle equals its opposite side divided
- 04:31
by the hypotenuse so the sine of 40 degrees equals v sub y over 50 point two
- 04:36
meters per second when we multiply each side by fifty point two meters per
- 04:40
second we find that the vertical velocity v sub y equals 32.3
- 04:45
meters per second all right now for the horizontal velocity that makes up the [Triangle appears with horizontal velocity]
- 04:50
adjacent side of our triangle which means we need to use the cah in
- 04:54
sohcahtoa the cosine of an angle equals its adjacent side over the hypotenuse so
- 05:00
once again we multiply both sides of the equation by the hypotenuse to solve for
- 05:04
v sub x well that math we're doing here tells us that the horizontal velocity is
- 05:10
38.5 meters per second okay we're making progress on this velocity stuff and
- 05:15
Rex is making progress getting himself upright yeah [Rex attempts to stand up from ditch]
- 05:20
those little arms aren't helping though all right now we can find the vertical
- 05:23
velocity that Rex achieved right before he hit the ground to do that we'll use
- 05:27
this equation again well this time we do have an initial velocity it's a thirty
- 05:32
two point three meters per second we just figured out a minute ago and the
- 05:36
acceleration will just be our good old 9.8 meters per second squared buddy
- 05:41
there aka gravity, oh in the displacement well that'd be the twelfth meter plummet
- 05:47
we plug in those numbers don't forget to find that square root and we get a final
- 05:52
velocity of thirty five point eight meters per second and that's it all done
- 05:56
we just need some hot cocoa and a paleontologist make sure Rex didn't break [Man with skis appears at lodge]
- 06:00
any bones but oh wait there's one more things there always is we have our final
- 06:06
vertical velocity and the horizontal velocity stayed the same
- 06:09
until the Dino met the ground yeah but we need to figure out the combined
- 06:15
velocity to get our actual final vector and we can do that with the Pythagorean
- 06:20
theorem Pythagorean theorem that was
- 06:23
Pythagoras' best theorem by far for this triangle v sub x squared plus v sub
- 06:28
y squared will equal the square of the combined velocity so when we add the [Equations appear]
- 06:34
squares and find that square root we get a final velocity 52.6 meters per second
- 06:39
so Rex didn't pick up a ton of speed on his way down but it was only a 12 meter
- 06:43
fall so not a big deal when we have a problem where the motion changes we need
- 06:48
to be sure to break those motions into separate chunks then we just need to
- 06:53
make sure we're using the right equation and that we're keeping track of any [Rex skiing down a slope]
- 06:56
changes in the vector components like when Rex went off that cliff
- 07:00
we had to factor in the vertical velocity he started with when he began
- 07:04
as freefall to get the right combined velocity so make sure to take things
- 07:08
step by step and pay attention to anything that needs to be carried over
- 07:11
from the previous step all right let's go back to the lodge hope they have [man with skis appears at the lodge]
- 07:15
those little marshmallows for the cocoa but Rex is still having a hard time
- 07:19
trying to deal with all his you know equipment well looks like he's got his
- 07:23
helmet balanced on top of one of his skis and he's trying to take those
- 07:26
boots off at the same time if that ski tips so that one end is 60 centimeters
- 07:31
lower than the other and the ski is 2 meters long well what are the final
- 07:35
velocity x and y-components for the helmet when it slides down and off the
- 07:39
ski ok oh this looks pretty familiar we just need to find the acceleration, well
- 07:44
acceleration equals gravity times the sine of the theta angle but we don't
- 07:48
know the degrees of that angle so more thinking, like we said before the sine of
- 07:53
an angle equals its opposite over the hypotenuse when we have the length of
- 07:58
the opposite side which is 60 centimeters and we have the hypotenuse
- 08:01
which is 2 meters well to find the angle it's almost like we need to work
- 08:05
backwards actually it's exactly like we need to work backwards like every trig [Rex skiing backwards]
- 08:09
function has an inverse function so if the sine of x equals y the inverse sine
- 08:16
of y equals x the inverse functions can look like this with a cute little
- 08:20
negative 1 in superscript like that or you can add arc to the beginning of the
- 08:25
function so the inverse of tangent is arctangent in the inverse of cosine is [inverse tangents appear]
- 08:30
arc cosine and the inverse of sine is arc sine so let's make sure our
- 08:34
calculator is set to use the inverse functions and that it's in degree mode [Rex using calculator]
- 08:39
and let's put in those numbers all right the arc sine of 60 meters which we'll
- 08:43
put in terms of meters over 2 meters equals 17 point five degrees now if you
- 08:49
use that number to find the helmets acceleration as it slides down the ski [helmet slides down the ski]
- 08:52
just isn't Rex's day so we'll go back to our acceleration equation acceleration
- 08:58
equals gravity 9.8 meters per second squared times the sine of the theta
- 09:02
angle which is 17.5 degrees okay so the helmet is picking up speed at a rate of
- 09:07
2.94 meters per second too fast for a dinosaurs slow
- 09:11
reflexes especially in the cold but remember we're trying to figure out the [Helmet hits man on the head]
- 09:15
final component velocities here but to do that we need to find the combined
- 09:20
velocity first we'll use this equation again and the initial velocity will be
- 09:25
zero so we just need to calculate 2 times the acceleration times the 2 meter
- 09:30
distance, O and find the square root so our combined final velocity is 3.4 [Combined final velocity equation appears]
- 09:36
meters per second and that's it okay now we're in the homestretch we
- 09:41
just need to break that vector down to its components it's important to
- 09:44
recognize that earlier when we were figuring out the degrees of the incline we
- 09:48
were working with lengths we weren't using velocity vectors just plain old
- 09:52
scalar lengths so even though the triangle looks the same we're working on
- 09:56
a whole new level well to find the component velocities we
- 10:00
just need a little bit more trig and then we're done to find the horizontal
- 10:03
vector we'll multiply our combined velocity times the cosine of the
- 10:07
17.5 degree angle making the velocity in the x-direction
- 10:13
3.27 meters per second and the vertical well, same basic idea except
- 10:19
we'll be using the sine instead of the cosine which gives us a vertical
- 10:23
velocity of 1.03 meters per second and yeah that makes sense since the [Skis propped up against a tree]
- 10:28
angle isn't very steep most of the velocity is along the horizontal axis
- 10:33
that's why the horizontal side of our triangle is a lot longer than the
- 10:37
vertical these lines represent the magnitude of these vectors see all that [Boy and Rex sat at a table]
- 10:41
works out okay now we're done for reals this time turns out all this ski stuff
- 10:46
was just an excuse to do more math, in reality were terrible at skiing we do
- 10:51
have a t-rex friend though....[Rex eats boy]
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