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Chapter 2: Motion in One-Dimension: Ck-12 Physics Flexbook® 2.0 Answer Key
Chapter 2: Motion in One-Dimension: Ck-12 Physics Flexbook® 2.0 Answer Key
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Answer Key
Review
Questions
1. Explain the difference between distance and displacement in your own words.
2. Suppose that John lives on a square block that is 180 yards per side, and in the
evenings, he walks with his dog around the block for a little exercise.
1. If John walks once around the block, what distance does he travel?
2. If John walks once around the block, what is his final displacement?
3. Joanna’s house is 8000 feet due west of her school. If her house is assigned the position
of zero and her school is assigned the position of +8000, what would Joanna’s position
be if she walked 100 feet west of her house?
Answers
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Questions
1. What is position?
2. Can two objects be the same distance from a single point but be in different positions?
Why or why not?
3. What is the difference between distance and displacement?
4. Does distance have direction? Does displacement have direction?
Answers
Review
Questions
1. On a one-day vacation, Jane traveled 340 miles in 8.0 hours. What was her average
speed?
2. An object on a number line moved from x = 12 m to x = 124 m and moved back to x = 98
m. The time interval for all the motion was 10. s. What was the average velocity of the
object?
3. An object on a number line moved from x = 15 cm to x = 165 cm and then moved back
to x = 25 cm all in a time of 100 seconds.
a. What was the average velocity of the object?
b. What was the average speed of the object?
Answers
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Questions
1. What is the main difference between average speed and average velocity?
Answers
1. Average speed is calculated by dividing the total distance travelled by the time interval.
Average velocity involves total displacement, instead of distance.
Review
Questions
Draw a velocity versus time graph for an object whose constant velocity is 15 m/s and whose
position starts at x= 0 when t = 0. Graph the motion for the first 5.0 seconds.
1. For the motion graphed in the position versus time graph shown above, what is the
average velocity in the time interval 1 to 3 seconds?
2. For the motion graphed in the position versus time graph shown above, what is the
average velocity in the time interval 3 to 4 seconds?
3. For the motion graphed in the position versus time graph shown above, what is the
average velocity in the time interval 5 to 6 seconds?
Answers
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Questions
Use this resource to answer the questions that follow: https://youtu.be/sujsb5ZlM8o.
Answers
Review
Questions
1. The velocity of a car increases from 2.0 m/s to 16.0 m/s in a time period of 3.5 s. What
was the average acceleration?
2. If an automobile slows from 26 m/s to 18 m/s in a period of 4.0 s, what was the average
acceleration?
3. If a runner increases his velocity from 0 m/s to 20 m/s in 2.0 s, what was his average
acceleration?
4. If a runner decreases his velocity from 20 m/s to 10 m/s in 2.0 s, what was his average
acceleration?
Answers
Review
Questions
1. If an object has zero acceleration, does that mean it has zero velocity? Give an
example.
2. If an object has zero velocity, does that mean it has zero acceleration? Give an
example.
3. If the acceleration of a motorboat is 4.0 m/s2, and the motorboat starts from rest, what is
its velocity after 6.0 s?
4. The friction of the water on a boat produces an acceleration of -10.0 m/s2. If the boat is
traveling at 30.0 m/s and the motor is shut off, how long it take the boat to slow down to
5.0 m/s?
Answers
1. No. An object with zero acceleration is not changing its velocity. However, it can have
any velocity. For example, a car travelling at 60 mph on a straight section of the freeway
has a consistent velocity of 60 mph, but it has zero acceleration.
2. No. An object can have a velocity of zero but still have an acceleration. For example,
take a ball that has been thrown into the air. At the moment the ball has reached its
highest location, the ball has zero velocity. Nonetheless, its direction is changing, which
means it has a changing (non-zero) acceleration.
2
3. Vf =
Vi+
at = 0 m /s + (4.0 m/s)( 6.0 s) = 24 m/s
2
4. Vf = V
i+ at; 5.0 m/s = 30.0 m/s + (-10.0 m/s)(t); t = 2.5 s
Review
Questions
1. An airplane accelerates with a constant rate of 3.0 m/s2 starting at a velocity of 21 m/s. If
the distance traveled during this acceleration was 535 m, what is the final velocity?
2. An car is brought to rest in a distance of 484 m using a constant acceleration of -8.0
m/s2. What was the velocity of the car when the acceleration first began?
3. An airplane starts from rest and accelerates at a constant 3.00 m/s2 for 20.0 s. What is
its displacement in this time?
4. A driver brings a car to a full stop in 2.0 s.
a. If the car was initially traveling at 22 m/s, what was the acceleration?
b. How far did the car travel during braking?
Answers
1. Using the formula v2 = v02 + 2ax, the final velocity is 60 m/s
2. Using the formula v2 = v02 + 2ax, the initial velocity was 88 m/s
3. Using the formula x = ½ at2, the displacement is 600 m.
4.
a. Since , a = 11 m/s2
b. Using the formula x = ½ at2, the displacement is 22 m
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Question
1. What does the area bounded by a velocity versus time graph represent?
Answer
1. The area bounded by a velocity versus time graph represents the object’s displacement.
Review
Questions
1. A baseball is thrown vertically into the air with a speed of 24.7 m/s.
a. How high does it go?
b. How long does the round trip up and down require?
2. A salmon jumps up a waterfall 2.4 m high. With what minimum speed did the salmon
leave the water below to reach the top?
3. A kangaroo jumps to a vertical height of 2.8 m. How long will it be in the air before
returning to earth?
Answers
1.
a. a = 9.8 m/s2 ; v i=24.7 m/s; v
f=0 m/s; v
2
f = v
2
i + 2ad; d= (v
2
f - v
2
i ) / 2a;
2
2 2
d = (610 - 0 m/s) / 2(9.8 m/s ) = 31 m
b. d = 31m; vi=24.7 m/s; vf=0 m/s; d= 1/2(vf - vi)t; t = 2d / (vf + vi);
t = 62 m / 24.7 m/s = 2.5 s
2. a = -9.8 m/s2 ; vf=0 m/s; d=2.4m; vf2 = vi2 + 2ad; vi2= vf2 - 2ad;
vi2 = 0 m2/s2 - 2(-9.8 m/s2 )(2.4m) = √47 m2/s2 = 6.9 m/s
√ =√
2d 2 (2.8m)
3. d = 2.8m; 9.8 m/s2 ; d = ½ at2; t= a 9.8m/s2 = 0.76s; 0.76s x 2 = 1.5 s
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Use this resource to answer the questions that follow: https://youtu.be/izXGpivLvgY.
Questions
1. What is the gravitational acceleration given in the video? Why does it differ from that
given in this text?
2. Why does the ball travel further in later time intervals than in the earlier ones?
Answers
1. The gravitational acceleration given in the video is 9.81 m/s. This is different because of
the altitude of the classroom.
2. The ball travels further later because it has a faster velocity. The change in velocity
(acceleration) is consistent, but at higher velocities, this change makes the ball get faster
and faster.
Review
Questions
Answers
1. To make a position-time graph, you plot position relative to the starting point on the
y-axis against the corresponding time on the x-axis.
2. The slope of a line graph is its steepness. The slope of a position-time graph represents
velocity.
3. Yes, a position-time graph can have a negative slope. This would represent the motion
of an object that is getting closer to the starting position.
4. The object’s velocity is 10 m/s.
Questions
1. Describe a velocity-time graph. What does the slope of the graph line represents?
2. In the Figure above, the sprinter reaches a velocity of 2 m/s in just 1 second. At a
constant rate of acceleration, how long does it take for her to double this velocity? What
is her acceleration during this time period?
3. Create a velocity-time graph by plotting the data in the Table 1.1 below.
Answers
1. A velocity-time graph shows how velocity changes over time. It plots velocity on the
y-axis and time on the x-axis. Each point on the graph represents the velocity at a given
time. The slope of the graph represents acceleration.
2. The runner doubles her velocity to 4 m/s by 2 seconds into the race, so it takes her just 1
second more to reach this velocity. Her acceleration during this period is 2 m/s2 .
3. See sketch of graph below: