chapter 9 section 3: acceleration

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Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration • Key concepts: What kind of motion does acceleration refer to? How is acceleration calculated? What graphs can be used to analyze the motion of an accelerating object? • Key term: acceleration

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Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration. Key concepts: What kind of motion does acceleration refer to? How is acceleration calculated? What graphs can be used to analyze the motion of an accelerating object? Key term: acceleration. What is acceleration?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration

Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration• Key concepts: What kind of motion does

acceleration refer to? How is acceleration calculated? What graphs can be used to analyze the motion of an accelerating object?

• Key term: acceleration

Page 2: Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration

What is acceleration?

• Acceleration (OMG is that really how you spell that? Why does that look so funny right now…) is the rate at which velocity changes.

• Remember: velocity refers to speed AND direction of an object.

Page 3: Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration

Acceleration: a change in velocity• In science, acceleration refers to increasing speed,

decreasing speed, or changing direction.

• Increasing speed = accelerates• Decreasing speed = deceleration (or negative

acceleration) • Changing direction: (even an object travelling at a

constant speed can be accelerating!!) a softball, for example, accelerates when it changes direction as it is hit; a runner as he/she rounds a curve accelerates even if maintaining a constant speed

Page 4: Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration

How can a car be accelerating if it is maintaining constant speed?

Page 5: Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration

Calculating acceleration

• To determine the acceleration of an object moving in a straight line, you must calculate the change in speed per unit of time.

• Acceleration = final speed – initial speedtime

Page 6: Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration

Acceleration calculations continued• SI unit for acceleration is usually m/s2

• For example: imagine an adorable plane

Page 7: Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration

The adorable plane

• The adorable plane accelerates as it takes off. Of course it does, otherwise we would never go anywhere and you would sit there on the tarmac asking your flight attendant for more tiny bags of peanuts for 8 hours and then you would get off the plane (or “deplane) in exactly the same place you started. Anyway…

Page 8: Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration
Page 9: Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration

It accelerates• How do we calculate its acceleration? • Please look at figure 7 on page 322 of your books

Do you remember the equation for acceleration?

Page 10: Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration

• At first, the plane is not moving. So its initial speed is 0 m/s

• Its final speed is 40m/s• It takes 5 seconds

• So, to calculate the average acceleration of the plane, you subtract the initial speed of 0 m/s (it isn’t moving when it starts) from the final speed of 40m/s, then divide the change in speed by the time, 5 seconds. Your answer is 8 m/s2

Page 11: Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration

In your notes

• Please attempt both math practice problems on page 323. Remember acceleration’s formula

• Acceleration = final speed – initial speedtime

Page 12: Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration

How to graph acceleration

• You can use both a speed vs time graph and a distance vs time graph to analyze the motion of an acceleration object

• Look at the graph in figure 8• How can you calculate the acceleration from

this graph? Easy: calculate the slope of the line• Rise/run = slope

Page 13: Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration

What else can you tell from the graph?

• This is important: you will need to know how to read graphs for the rest of your ever-lovin’ lives!

• B/c the line is straight: the acceleration was constant

• b/c the line goes up: speed was increasing

Page 14: Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration

Distance vs time graph figure 9 pg 325

• A curved line means that the object is accelerating b/c you travelled a greater distance each second than the second before it

Page 15: Chapter 9 Section 3: Acceleration

We’re done wid dis chaptahh

• Now we commits it to memoriess