angeleyesz thumbnail
17th Anniversary Thumbnail Explorer Thumbnail
Posted: 16 years ago
#1
On a position-time graph, how do you find:

a. Position?
b. Displacement?
c. Distance?
d. Velocity (if constant)
e. Average Velocity
f. Velocity (if not constant)


[ btw.. this is grade 11 physics ] =)

Created

Last reply

Replies

2

Views

11k

Users

3

Frequent Posters

_rajnish_ thumbnail
17th Anniversary Thumbnail Voyager Thumbnail
Posted: 16 years ago
#2

Originally posted by: angeleyesz

On a position-time graph, how do you find:

a. Position?
b. Displacement?
c. Distance?
d. Velocity (if constant)
e. Average Velocity
f. Velocity (if not constant)


[ btw.. this is grade 11 physics ] =)


In position time graph x axis represent time and y axis represent position..

1- position- go up from corresponding time to the curve, find y intercept , it will give you position

2- the difference in y intercept between initial and final position (y2-y1)


4- slope of the curve

5-find y2 and y1 and corrosponding x2 and x1 the average will be (y2-y1)/ (x2-x1)

6- find tangent to the curve at that point of time and then find its slope, it will give you velocity if not constant
Edited by rajnish_here - 16 years ago
akhl thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Dazzler Thumbnail Fascinator 1 Thumbnail
Posted: 16 years ago
#3
You posted this question in my web site. I replied there. I am posting the same reply here.

a. Position
Take the position coordinate. If you are plotting position on y axis and time on x axis, then y coordinate of any point gives the position at that point.

b. Displacement
Read initial and final positions from the graph as explained in (a). Take the difference between them (final position - initial position). This gives the displacement

c. Distance
Mark the start and end points in the graph. Start and end points mean the points between which you have to find distance. In between those two mark the points at which the graph is going from up to down or from down to up. So now you have several points. These points divide the graph into different parts between the start and the end points. For each part, calculate the displacement as explained in (b). Take its absolute value, which means, if it is negative, then make it positive. That gives the distance for that part. Likewise find distances for all the parts and add them.

d. Velocity (if constant)
If velocity is constant, then the graph is a straight line. The gradient of the line gives the velocity.

e. Average Velocity
Find displacement between initial and final positions as explained in (b). Read time coordinates of those points. Final time coordinate - initial time coordinate = time taken.
Average velocity = displacement/time taken

f. Velocity (if not constant)
Draw a tangent to the curve at the point at which you want to find the velocity. Find the graident of this tangent.

If you have some graphs for which you want to ask these questions, then attach the graphs here.

Related Topics

Top

Stay Connected with IndiaForums!

Be the first to know about the latest news, updates, and exclusive content.

Add to Home Screen!

Install this web app on your iPhone for the best experience. It's easy, just tap and then "Add to Home Screen".