Motion Ncert
Motion Ncert
MOTION
In everyday life, we see some objects at rest
and others in motion. Birds fly, fish swim,
blood flows through veins and arteries and
cars move. Atoms, molecules, planets, stars
and galaxies are all in motion. We often
perceive an object to be in motion when its
position changes with time. However, there
are situations where the motion is inferred
through indirect evidences. For example, we
infer the motion of air by observing the
movement of dust and the movement of leaves
and branches of trees. What causes the
phenomena of sunrise, sunset and changing
of seasons? Is it due to the motion of the
earth? If it is true, why dont we directly
perceive the motion of the earth?
An object may appear to be moving for
one person and stationary for some other. For
the passengers in a moving bus, the roadside
trees appear to be moving backwards. A
person standing on the roadside perceives
the bus alongwith the passengers as moving.
However, a passenger inside the bus sees his
fellow passengers to be at rest. What do these
observations indicate?
Most motions are complex. Some objects
may move in a straight line, others may take
a circular path. Some may rotate and a few
others may vibrate. There may be situations
involving a combination of these. In this
chapter, we shall first learn to describe the
motion of objects along a straight line. We
shall also learn to express such motions
through simple equations and graphs. Later,
we shall discuss ways of describing circular
motion.
uestions
Table 8.1
8.1.2 UNIFORM
MOTION
AND
Time
Distance
travelled by
object A in m
Distance
travelled by
object B in m
9:30 am
9:45 am
10
20
12
19
10:00 am
10:15 am
30
40
23
35
10:30 am
50
37
10:45 am
11:00 am
60
70
41
44
NON -
UNIFORM MOTION
(a)
100
(b)
Fig. 8.2
SCIENCE
s
t
(8.1)
Average speed =
Mathematically, vav =
u +v
2
(8.2)
uestions
1. Distinguish between speed and
velocity.
2. Under what condition(s) is the
magnitude of average velocity of
an object equal to its average
speed?
3. What does the odometer of an
automobile measure?
4. What does the path of an object
look like when it is in uniform
motion?
5. During an experiment, a signal
from a spaceship reached the
ground station in five minutes.
What was the distance of the
spaceship from the ground
station? The signal travels at the
speed of light, that is, 3 108
m s1.
s
t
400 km
8h
= 50 km h 1
102
= 50
km
1000 m
1km
1h
3600s
= 13.9 m s
The average speed of the car is
50 km h1 or 13.9 m s1.
1
60 s
= 0 m s1
Solution:
change in velocity
acceleration =
time taken
(8.3)
vu
t
a=
vu
t
6 m s 1 0 m s 1
30 s
= 0.2 m s2
4 m s 1 6 m s 1
5s
= 0.4 m s2 .
uestions
1. When will you say a body is in
(i) uniform acceleration? (ii) nonuniform acceleration?
2. A bus decreases its speed from
80 km h 1 to 60 km h1 in 5 s.
Find the acceleration of the bus.
3. A train starting from a railway
station and moving with uniform
acceleration attains a speed
40 km h1 in 10 minutes. Find its
acceleration.
103
s 2 s1
(8.4)
t2 t1
Time in seconds
Distance in metres
16
10
25
12
36
SCIENCE
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
0
9
18
27
36
45
54
105
Velocity (km h )
1
(AD DE)
2
A
B
C
Distance
from A
(km)
0
120
180
Time of Time of
arrival departure
(hours)
(hours)
08:00
11:15
13:00
08:15
11:30
13:15
Distance
travelled
by Feroz
(km)
Distance
travelled
by Sania
(km)
8:00 am
8:05 am
1.0
0.8
8:10 am
1.9
1.6
8:15 am
2.8
2.3
8:20 am
3.6
3.0
8:25 am
3.6
Q
MOTION
8.5.1 E Q UATION
RELATION
uestions
1. What is the nature of the
distance-time graphs for uniform
and non-uniform motion of an
object?
2. What can you say about the
motion of an object whose
distance-time graph is a straight
line parallel to the time axis?
3. What can you say about the
motion of an object if its speedtime graph is a straight line
parallel to the time axis?
4. What is the quantity which is
measured by the area occupied
below the velocity-time graph?
Change in velocity
time taken
= OA OC +
Substituting OA = u, OC = AD = t and
= at, we get
s=u t +
or
2
Substituting OA = u, BC = v and OC = t,
we get
u +v t
(8.11)
(8.9)
1
at2
2
OA + BC OC
BD
t
8.5.2 EQUATION
RELATION
1
(t at )
2
RELATION
BD = at
BD
Substituting OC = t, we get
or
s=u t+
(8.10)
BD
BD
=
=
AD
OC
a=
1
(AD BD)
2
v u
(8.12)
v +u
v- u
2a
2 a s = v2 u2
Solution:
s=ut +
1
1 m s2 (5 s) 2
2
= 25 m + 12.5 m
= 5 m s1 5 s +
vu
a=
= 37.5 m
2
The acceleration of the car is 1 m s
and the distance covered is 37.5 m.
20 m s 1 0 m s 1
=
300 s
1
m s 2
15
v2
2a
Solution:
1 2
(20 m s )
2(1/15) ms
= 3000 m
= 3 km
1
m s 2
15
s = u t+
= 1 m s2
MOTION
1
at
2
= (12 m s1 ) (2 s) +
1
(6 m s2 ) (2 s)2
2
= 24 m 12 m
= 12 m
Solution:
1
at2
2
uestions
1. A bus starting from rest moves
with a uniform acceleration of
0.1 m s-2 for 2 minutes. Find (a)
the speed acquired, (b) the
distance travelled.
109
2 r
t
(8.13)
What
you have
learnt
MOTION
Exercises
1. An athlete completes one round of a circular track of diameter
200 m in 40 s. What will be the distance covered and the
displacement at the end of 2 minutes 20 s?
2. Joseph jogs from one end A to the other end B of a straight
300 m road in 2 minutes 30 seconds and then turns around
and jogs 100 m back to point C in another 1 minute. What are
Josephs average speeds and velocities in jogging (a) from A to
B and (b) from A to C?
3. Abdul, while driving to school, computes the average speed for
his trip to be 20 km h1. On his return trip along the same
route, there is less traffic and the average speed is
30 km h1. What is the average speed for Abduls trip?
4. A motorboat starting from rest on a lake accelerates in a straight
line at a constant rate of 3.0 m s2 for 8.0 s. How far does the
boat travel during this time?
5. A driver of a car travelling at 52 km h1 applies the brakes and
accelerates uniformly in the opposite direction. The car stops
in 5 s. Another driver going at 3 km h1 in another car applies
his brakes slowly and stops in 10 s. On the same graph paper,
plot the speed versus time graphs for the two cars. Which of
the two cars travelled farther after the brakes were applied?
6. Fig 8.11 shows the distance-time graph of three objects A,B
and C. Study the graph and answer the following questions:
Fig. 8.11
112
SCIENCE
Fig. 8.12
(a) Find how far does the car travel in the first 4 seconds.
Shade the area on the graph that represents the distance
travelled by the car during the period.
(b) Which part of the graph represents uniform motion of the
car?
9. State which of the following situations are possible and give
an example for each of these:
(a) an object with a constant acceleration but with zero velocity
(b) an object moving in a certain direction with an acceleration
in the perpendicular direction.
10. An artificial satellite is moving in a circular orbit of radius
42250 km. Calculate its speed if it takes 24 hours to revolve
around the earth.
MOTION
113