phy1_Query_1

#$&*

course phy241

9/16 5:06PM

ph1 query 1*********************************************

Question: `qExplain in your own words how the standard deviation of a set of numbers is calculated.

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

First we must find the deviations from the mean ;

Take each interval and subtract it by the Mean of all the intervals.

Then we must take each deviation and square it.

If we had .04 as a deviation it would = .0016

Then we add each squared deviation and divide it by 1 less than the amount of intervals (as long as it under 30).

So if we had 7 intervals we would take the addition of each squared deviation and divide it by 6. Now you have what’s called the average squared deviation.

To find the Standard Deviation we must sqrt the average squared deviation.

If your average squared deviation is .00572 - then your standard deviation would the sqrt of that. Which = .0756

confidence rating #$&*: 3

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

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

Question: Briefly state what you think velocity is and how you think it is an example of a rate.

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

A rate is a change in something / a change in something else…. So like

`x / `y is a rate. 30mph is a rate as well, because its 30 miles / 1 hour.

Velocity is very much a rate because it is measuring how much distance something covers in a given amount of time (typically 1 unit of time whether it be seconds minutes or hours).

confidence rating #$&*: 3

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

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

Given Solution:

A rate is a change in something divided by a change in something else.

This question concerns velocity, which is the rate of change of position: change in position divided by change in clock time. **

NOTE ON NOTATION

Students often quote a formula like v = d / t. It's best to avoid this formula completely.

The average velocity on an interval is defined as change in position / change in clock time.

• The symbol d doesn't look like a change in anything, nor does the symbol t.

• And the symbol v doesn't distinguish between initial velocity, final velocity, average velocity, change in velocity and instantaneous velocity, all of which are important concepts that need to be associated with distinct symbols.

In this course we use `d to stand for the capital Greek symbol Delta, which universally indicates the change in a quantity. If we use d for distance, then the 'change in distance' would be denoted `dd. Very confusing to have two different d's, with two different meanings, in the same expression.

We generally use s or x to stand for position, so `ds or `dx would stand for change in position. Change in clock time would be `dt. Thus

v_Ave = `ds / `dt

(or alternatively, if we use x for position, v_Ave = `dx / `dt).

With this notation we can tell that we are dividing change in position by change in clock time.

For University Physics students (calculus-based note):

If x is the position then velocity is dx/dt, the derivative of position with respect to clock time. This is the limiting value of the rate of change of position with respect to clock time. You need to think in these terms.

v stands for instantaneous velocity. v_Ave stands for the average velocity on an interval.

If you used d for position then you would have the formula v = dd / dt. The dd in the numerator doesn't make a lot of sense; one d indicates the infinitesimal change in the other d.

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

Self-critique (if necessary):

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

Question: Given average speed and time interval how do you find distance moved?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

Multiply average speed by the time interval. This will give you distance.

confidence rating #$&*: 3

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

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

Given Solution:

** You multiply average speed * time interval to find distance moved.

For example, 50 miles / hour * 3 hours = 150 miles. **

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

Self-critique (if necessary):

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

Question: Given average speed and distance moved how do you find the corresponding time interval?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

Your answer would be given by taking the distance moved divided by the average speed. So;

If an object is moving @ 20m/s and it traveled 60 meters, time would be given by

60m / 20m/s the “m” unit will be crossed out from division leaving you with only seconds as a unit. 60/20 = 3s. It took the object 3 seconds to go 60 meters.

confidence rating #$&*: 3

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

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

Given Solution:

** time interval = distance / average speed. For example if we travel 100 miles at 50 mph it takes 2 hours--we divide the distance by the speed.

In symbols, if `ds = vAve * `dt then `dt = `ds/vAve.

Also note that (cm/s ) / s = cm/s^2, not sec, whereas cm / (cm/s) = cm * s / cm = s, as appropriate in a calculation of `dt. **

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

Self-critique (if necessary):

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

Question: Given time interval and distance moved how do you get average speed?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

Average speed = distance moved / time interval. So;

If an object moved 30 cm in 3 seconds then the average speed would be 30cm/3s = 10cm/s

confidence rating #$&*: 3

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

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

Given Solution:

** Average speed = distance / change in clock time. This is the definition of average speed.

For example if we travel 300 miles in 5 hours we have been traveling at an average speed of 300 miles / 5 hours = 60 miles / hour. **

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

Self-critique (if necessary):

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

Question: A ball rolls from rest down a book, off that book and onto another book, where it picks up speed before rolling off the end of that book. Consider the interval that begins when the ball first encounters the second book, and ends when it rolls of the end of the book.

For this interval, place in order the quantities initial velocity (which we denote v_0), and final velocity (which we denote v_f), average velocity (which we denote v_Ave).

During this interval, the ball's velocity changes. It is possible for the change in its velocity to exceed the three quantities you just listed? Is it possible for all three of these quantities to exceed the change in the ball's velocity? Explain.

Note that the change in the ball's velocity is denoted `dv.

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

v_0

v_Ave

v_f

the balls change in velocity while rolling down the second book will definitely be higher then the initial velocity, and probably a little lower than the average velocity, but it will not be higher than the final velocity.

confidence rating #$&*:

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

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

Question: If the velocity at the beginning of an interval is 4 m/s and at the end of the interval it is 10 m/s, then what is the average of these velocities, and what is the change in velocity?

List the four quantities initial velocity, final velocity, average of initial and final velocities, and change in velocity, in order from least to greatest.

Give an example of positive initial and final velocities for which the order of the four quantities would be different.

For positive initial and final velocities, is it possible for the change in velocity to exceed the other three quanities?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

V_0 4 m/s

V_chge 6 m/s

V_Ave 7 m/s

V_f 10 m/s

confidence rating #$&*: 3

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

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

Question: If the position of an object changes by 5.2 meters, with an uncertainty of +-4%, during a time interval of 1.3 seconds, with an uncertainty of +-2%, then

What is the uncertainty in the change in position in meters>

What is the uncertainty in the time interval in seconds?

What is the average velocity of the object, and what do you think ia the uncertainty in the average velocity?

(this last question is required of University Physics students only, but other are welcome to answer): What is the percent uncertainty in the average velocity of the object, and what is the uncertainty as given in units of velocity?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

confidence rating #$&*:

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

4% of 5.2m = .208 => +-.208 of 5.2m = 4.992 or 5.408

2% of 1.3s = .026 => +-.026 of 1.3 = 1.274 or 1.326

v_ave = 5.2m/ 1.3s = 4m/s.

I would say the uncertainty would be between 4.992/1.274 = 3.92m/s and 5.408/1.326 = 4.08m/s

Percent uncertainty would be 6% right?

"

@& Right.*@

&#Very good responses. Let me know if you have questions. &#