1 / 10

PHYSICAL QUANTITIES BASIC VS. DERIVED QUANTITIES BASIC • DISTANCE (also LENGTH or DISPLACEMENT)

PHYSICAL QUANTITIES BASIC VS. DERIVED QUANTITIES BASIC • DISTANCE (also LENGTH or DISPLACEMENT) • MASS • TIME DERIVED DERIVED QUANTITIES ARE ARRIVED AT BY COMBINING BASIC QUANTITIES IN VARIOUS WAYS. e.g., Velocity = Change in Position/Time VELOCITY AND ACCELERATION 1. VELOCITY :

maj
Télécharger la présentation

PHYSICAL QUANTITIES BASIC VS. DERIVED QUANTITIES BASIC • DISTANCE (also LENGTH or DISPLACEMENT)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PHYSICAL QUANTITIES • BASIC VS. DERIVED QUANTITIES • BASIC • • DISTANCE (also LENGTH or DISPLACEMENT) • • MASS • • TIME • DERIVED • DERIVED QUANTITIES ARE ARRIVED AT BY COMBINING BASIC QUANTITIES IN VARIOUS WAYS. • e.g., Velocity = Change in Position/Time • VELOCITY AND ACCELERATION • 1. VELOCITY: • v = Δx/t, where: v = velocity (more precisely, average velocity) • Δx = change in position (Δ means “change in”) t = time over which the position change occurred

  2. Examples: 60 mph: 60 miles (the distance) divided by 1 hour (the time) 800 meters per sec: 800 meters (the distance) divided by 1 sec (the time) 2. ACCELERATION CHANGE IN VELOCITY OVER TIME (e.g., "0 to 60 in 6 seconds") a = Δv/t a = acceleration (more precisely, average acceleration) Δv = change in velocity t = time over which velocity change occurred English translation: Change in velocity divided by the time over which the velocity change occurred. Basic idea: Speeding up or slowing down. Note that slowing down is also acceleration – called deceleration or negative acceleration. Negative acceleration is every bit as important as positive acceleration: When a car strikes a tree, for example, the force that occurs is related to the rapid deceleration of the car.

  3. 3. FORCE Amount of "push" or "pull" on an object F=Ma F = force M= mass a = acceleration So, force will be high when massive objects are highly accelerated; e.g., a Buick hitting a tree at 100 mph will generate more force than a Miyata hitting the same tree at 10 mph.

  4. 4. PRESSURE Force per unit area E = F/A ('E' is used because P will be needed later for power) E = pressure F = force A = area over which force is delivered Pressure is high when the force is large and/or when that force is focused on a small area. Pressure can be increased either by increasing force, or by decreasing the area over which the force is delivered. (The middle ear uses this trick to amplify pressure.)

  5. Suppose these two objects – identical except for orientation – were dropped from exactly the same height on a napkin below. Which would be more likely to rip the napkin? Obviously, it’s the one on the right, but why? Greater force? No. F = Ma. The masses are equal and, if dropped from the same height, the acceleration would have to be the same. So, they hit the napkin with the same force. So, what’s the difference? The pressureis greater for the object on the right since the force is being delivered over a smaller area. On this subject: (a) Why do sharp knives cut better than dull ones? (b) Why are thumb tacks pushed in pointy end 1st rather than the other way around?

  6. 5. WORK Work is related to the ability to move things. When large forces are used move objects great distances, a lot of work has been done. When small forces are used to move objects small distances, a small amount of work has been done. W = Fx W = work F = force x = distance Laborer 1: Applies a given force to move a pile of bricks a distance of 30 meters. Laborer 2: Applies the same size force to move the same pile of bricks a distance of 60 meters. Conclusion: Laborer 2 has done twice the work of Laborer 1.

  7. 6. POWER • Power = work per unit time, or the rate at which work is done. • P = W/t P = power • W = work • t = time taken to complete the work • Laborer 1: Applies a given force to move a pile of bricks a distance of 30 meters and completes the job in 30 minutes. • Laborer 2: Applies the same size force to move the same pile of bricks the same distance of 30 meters, but completes the job in 15 minutes. • Conclusions: • Work performed is identical (since the force and distance are the same) • Twice as much power is generated by Laborer 2 than Laborer 1 because the work was accomplished in a shorter period of time.

  8. 7. INTENSITY Intensity = power per unit area, i.e., the amount of power that is "focused" on a given area. I = P/A I = intensity P = power A = area over which power is measured Note: relationship between power and intensity is analogous to the one we saw earlier between force and pressure: pressure = force per unit area intensity = power per unit area There is a close relationship between pressure and intensity. We will see how this works when we talk about the decibel scale.

  9. __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________ Summary of Physical Quantities Quantity Formula Units Concept _________________________________________________________________ force F = Ma Newton amount of "push" or dyne "pull" on an object M = mass a = acceleration pressure E = F/A Newton/sq meter pressure is high when dynes/sq centimeter a large force is delivered F = force Pascal over a small area A = area velocity v = x/t meters per sec high velocity means miles per hour covering a large x = distance distance in a short t = time period of time acceleration a = (v2-v1)/t meters per sec per second speeding up or miles per hour per second slowing down; i.e., v1 = starting vel a change in velocity v2 = ending vel over time v1 = starting vel t = time ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________

  10. ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ Summary of Physical Quantities Quantity Formula Units Concept ___________________________________________________________________ work W = Fx joule a large amount of work is erg done when a large force F = force force moves an object a x = distance great distance power P = W/t watt the rateat which work is horsepower done W = work t = time intensity I = P/A watts/square meter intensity is high when a watts/square centimeter large amount of power is P = power focused on a small area A = area ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________

More Related