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Page 1: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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Page 2: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres
Page 3: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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Distance (d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.

Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres (km)

Eg. Christchurch is 360km from Dunedin

Page 4: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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Time ( t ) – describes how long an object takes to reach its end point.

Units for time are seconds (s), minutes (min) and hours (hr)

Eg. It takes 17.5 min

to get to school.

Page 5: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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Speed (v) – used to describe how fast an object is moving.

Speed is often referred to as velocity (v).

Units for speed are measured as distance per unit of time

m/s km/hr km/s.

Page 6: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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Instantaneous speed (v) – how fast an object is moving at a given point in time.

Average speed (vav) – how fast an object is moving over the entire journey.

Page 7: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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To work out the speed of an object you need to know:

d and

t

Page 8: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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The units for speed depends on the units for distance and time.

distance travelled

time takenaverage speed =

d

vav t

Page 9: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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Page 10: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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A boy takes 1 hour to travel from his home to the cinema, a distance of 10 km. Calculate his average speed in km/hr.

Vav =

=

= 10 km/hr

d

vav tCover the quantity to be calculated.

dt

10 km

1 h

Page 11: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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A boy takes 1 hour to travel from his home to the cinema, a distance of 10 km. Calculate his average speed in m/s.

Vav =

=

= 2.8 m/s

d

vav tCover the quantity to be calculated.

dt

10 000 m

3 600 s

Page 12: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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A family set off from home and walk at an average speed of 3.6 km/h. How far will they travel in two hours?

d = Vav x t

= 3.6 km/h x 2 h

= 7.2 km

d

vav tCover the quantity to be calculated.

Page 13: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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How long would it take a woman to walk 10 km, if her average speed was 5.4 km/h?

t =

=

= 1.85 h

d

vav tCover the quantity to be calculated.

dVav

10 km

5.4 km/h

Page 14: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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Go to website.

Page 15: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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This graphing experiment shows an animation of a car travelling along a straight road.

1. Copy the results table shown on the next slide and complete it as the movie is played.

2. Record the distance the car has travelled every five seconds.

3. Plot a graph of your results.

Page 16: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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Time/seconds Distance/metres

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

55

Page 17: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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Page 18: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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Time/seconds Distance/metres

0 0

5 16

10 76

15 186

20 234

25 484

30 634

35 784

40 904

45 974

50 994

55 994

Page 19: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55

Dis

tance

( m

etre

s)

Time (seconds)

Distance / Time graph for car

Page 20: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55

Dis

tance

( m

etre

s)

Time (seconds)

Distance / Time graph for car

The car is going fast but at a constant speed.The graph is straight in this part of the journey.

Page 21: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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The speed of the car can be calculated by looking at the slope (gradient) of the distance/time graph.

Speed is “distance travelled” divided by “time taken”.

These values can be read off the distance/time graph at different points, and this is the same as the gradient of the graph.

Page 22: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55

Dis

tance

( m

etre

s)

Time (seconds)

Distance / Time graph for car

Page 23: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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Acceleration (a) – shows the change in speed over a period of time.

Acceleration can be both positive (acceleration) and negative (deceleration).

Page 24: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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The units for acceleration depends on the units for speed and time.

final speed - initial speed

time takenacceleration =

∆V

a ∆t

Page 25: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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A car speeds up from a stop light to a speed of 15.3 m/s in just 4 seconds. Calculate the acceleration of the car.

a =

=

= 3.8 m/s/s or m/s2

∆V

a ∆tCover the quantity to be calculated.

∆V∆ t

15.3 m/s

4 s

Page 26: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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As she climbs a hill, a cyclist slows down from 7 m/s to 3 m/s in 10 seconds. What is her acceleration?.

a =

=

= - 0.4 m/s2

∆V

a ∆tCover the quantity to be calculated.

∆V∆ t- 4 m/s

10 s

Page 27: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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While traveling along a highway a truck goes from 100 km/hr to 60 km/hr in 8 seconds. What is the truck’s acceleration?.

a =

=

= - 1.4 m/s2

∆V

a ∆tCover the quantity to be calculated.

∆V∆ t

8 s

- 40 km/h- 11.1 m/s

Page 28: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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The slope of a speed-time graph gives an objects acceleration.

Page 29: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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The area under the graph gives us the distance travelled

Page 30: 1 of 43. 3 of 43  Distance ( d ) – describes how far an object has travelled from a starting point.  Units for distance are metres (m) or kilometres

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