phy1 query 3

#$&*

course Phy 231

6/12 4:40 am

If your solution to stated problem does not match the given solution, you should self-critique per instructions at

http://vhcc2.vhcc.edu/dsmith/geninfo/labrynth_created_fall_05/levl1_22/levl2_81/file3_25

9.htm

.

Your solution, attempt at solution. If you are unable to attempt a solution, give a

phrase-by-phrase interpretation of the problem along with a statement of what you do or

do not understand about it. This response should be given, based on the work you did in

completing the assignment, before you look at the given solution.

003. `Query 3

*********************************************

Question: What do the coordinates of two points on a graph of position vs. clock time

tell you about the motion of the object? What can you reason out once you have these

coordinates?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

They tell you in what direction an object is moving and how far it traveled in a time

interval. From these coordinates you can calculate the average velocity of the object.

confidence rating #$&*: 3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution: The coordinates a point on the graph include a position and a clock

time, which tells you where the object whose motion is represented by the graph is at a

given instant. If you have two points on the graph, you know the position and clock

time at two instants.

Given two points on a graph you can find the rise between the points and the run.

On a graph of position vs. clock time, the position is on the 'vertical' axis and the

clock time on the 'horizontal' axis.

The rise between two points represents the change in the 'vertical' coordinate, so in

this case the rise represents the change in position.

The run between two points represents the change in the 'horizontal' coordinate, so in

this case the run represents the change in clock time.

The slope between two points of a graph is the 'rise' from one point to the other,

divided by the 'run' between the same two points.

The slope of a position vs. clock time graph therefore represents rise / run = (change

in position) / (change in clock time).

By the definition of average velocity as the average rate of change of position with

respect to clock time, we see that average velocity is vAve = (change in position) /

(change in clock time).

Thus the slope of the position vs. clock time graph represents the average velocity for

the interval between the two graph points.

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary): OK

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique Rating: 3

*********************************************

Question:

Pendulums of lengths 20 cm and 25 cm are counted for one minute. The counts are

respectively 69 and 61. To how many significant figures do we know the difference

between these counts?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your Solution:

two

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

*********************************************

Question:

What are some possible units for position? What are some possible units for clock time?

What therefore are some possible units for rate of change of position with respect to

clock time?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your Solution:

m ,cm, km, sec, min, hr, cm/s, m/s, km/hr

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

*********************************************

Question: `qQuery Principles of Physics and General College Physics: Summarize your

solution to Problem 1.19 (1.80 m + 142.5 cm + 5.34 * 10^5 `micro m to appropriate # of

significant figures)

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

`a** 1.80 m has three significant figures (leading zeros don't count, neither to

trailing zeros unless there is a decimal point; however zeros which are listed after the

decimal point are significant; that's the only way we have of distinguishing, say, 1.80

meter (read to the nearest .01 m, i.e., nearest cm) and 1.000 meter (read to the nearest

millimeter).

Therefore no measurement smaller than .01 m can be distinguished.

142.5 cm is 1.425 m, good to within .00001 m.

5.34 * `micro m means 5.34 * 10^-6 m, so 5.34 * 10^5 micro m means (5.34 * 10^5) * 10^-6

meters = 5.34 + 10^-1 meter, or .534 meter, accurate to within .001 m.

Then theses are added you get 3.759 m; however the 1.80 m is only good to within .01 m

so the result is 3.76 m. **

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

*********************************************

Question: For University Physics students: Summarize your solution to Problem 1.31

(10th edition 1.34) (4 km on line then 3.1 km after 45 deg turn by components, verify by

scaled sketch).

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

The solution is you add the vectors tip to tail then draw a line from the beginning

point to the endpoint. This is the resultant. The resultant is the sqrt of the sum of

the x-coponent squared and the y-component squared. The resultant for this problem is

7.8 km. To find the angle you can use the inverse tangent which is tan^-1 of y/x. For

this problem that is tan^-1 (4.8/6.2).

confidence rating #$&*: 3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

`a** THE FOLLOWING CORRECT SOLUTION WAS GIVEN BY A STUDENT:

The components of vectors A (2.6km in the y direction) and B (4.0km in the x direction)

are known.

We find the components of vector C(of length 3.1km) by using the sin and cos functions.

Cx was 3.1 km * cos(45 deg) = 2.19. Adding the x component of the second vector, 4.0,

we get 6.19km.

Cy was 2.19 and i added the 2.6 km y displacement of the first vector to get 4.79.

So Rx = 6.19 km and Ry = 4.79 km.

To get vector R, i used the pythagorean theorem to get the magnitude of vector R, which

was sqrt( (6.29 km)^2 + (4.79 km)^2 ) = 7.9 km.

The angle is theta = arctan(Ry / Rx) = arctan(4.79 / 6.19) = 37.7 degrees. **

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary): OK

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique Rating: 3

*********************************************

Question:

A ball rolls from rest down a book, off that book and onto another book, where it picks

up additional speed before rolling off the end of that book.

Suppose you know all the following information:

How far the ball rolled along each book.

The time interval the ball requires to roll from one end of each book to the other.

How fast the ball is moving at each end of each book.

How would you use your information to determine the clock time at each of the three

points, if we assume the clock started when the ball was released at the 'top' of the

first book?

How would you use your information to sketch a graph of the ball's position vs. clock

time?

(This question is more challenging that the others): How would you use your information

to sketch a graph of the ball's speed vs. clock time, and how would this graph differ

from the graph of the position?

I would take the velocity at the end of the book and divide it by the distance to find

the time interval. Then add that time interval to the previous time either known(0) or

calculated.

I would skecth a graph such that the clock time is the x-axis and the position is the

y-axis. The graph would increase at a constant rate.

The graph of the speed would have the clock time along the x-axis and speed along the

y-axis. This graph would increase at an increasing rate.

@& It position vs. time is a straight line, then velocity vs. time will not be increasing at an increasing rate.

If velocity is increasing then the position vs. time graph cannot be a straight line.

Can you revise this last response?

&#Please see my notes and, unless my notes indicate that revision is optional, submit a copy of this document with revisions and/or questions, and mark your insertions with &&&& (please mark each insertion at the beginning and at the end).

Be sure to include the entire document, including my notes.

If my notes indicate that revision is optional, use your own judgement as to whether a revision will benefit you.

&#