Lecture 1 and 2: Saif Ahmed (Sfa) Lecturer, Department of Mathematics and Physics North South University
This document provides an overview of key concepts in physics measurement and motion, including:
1) Measurement involves quantifying physical quantities like length, time, mass using standardized units and base quantities that other quantities can be defined from.
2) The International System of Units (SI) establishes 7 base quantities including meters, kilograms and seconds to standardize measurement.
3) Motion concepts covered include position, displacement, velocity, speed, and acceleration, particularly constant acceleration like free fall acceleration. Precise measurement of motion requires understanding these concepts and units.
Lecture 1 and 2: Saif Ahmed (Sfa) Lecturer, Department of Mathematics and Physics North South University
This document provides an overview of key concepts in physics measurement and motion, including:
1) Measurement involves quantifying physical quantities like length, time, mass using standardized units and base quantities that other quantities can be defined from.
2) The International System of Units (SI) establishes 7 base quantities including meters, kilograms and seconds to standardize measurement.
3) Motion concepts covered include position, displacement, velocity, speed, and acceleration, particularly constant acceleration like free fall acceleration. Precise measurement of motion requires understanding these concepts and units.
Lecturer, Department of Mathematics and Physics North South University Measurement • We discover physics by learning how to measure the quantities involved in physics. Among these quantities are length, time, mass, temperature, pressure, and electric current. • We measure each physical quantity in its own units, by comparison with a standard. The unit is a unique name we assign to measures of that quantity—for example, meter (m) for the quantity length. The standard corresponds to exactly 1.0 unit of the quantity Base Quantities • There are so many physical quantities that it is a problem to organize them. Fortunately, they are not all independent; for example, speed is the ratio of a length to a time. Thus, what we do is pick out—by international agreement—a small number of physical quantities, such as length and time, and assign standards to them alone. We then define all other physical quantities in terms of these base quantities and their standards (called base standards). Speed, for example, is defined in terms of the base quantities length and time and their base standards.
• Base standards must be both accessible and invariable. If we define the
length standard as the distance between one’s nose and the index finger on an outstretched arm, we certainly have an accessible standard—but it will, of course, vary from person to person. The demand for precision in science and engineering pushes us to aim first for invariability. The International System of Units • In 1971, the 14th General Conference on Weights and Measures picked seven quantities as base quantities, thereby forming the basis of the International System of Units, abbreviated SI from its French name and popularly known as the metric system. Changing Units • We often need to change the units in which a physical quantity is expressed. We do so by a method called chain-link conversion. In this method, we multiply the original measurement by a conversion factor (a ratio of units that is equal to unity). Length • In 1792, the newborn Republic of France established a new system of weights and measures. Its cornerstone was the meter, defined to be one ten-millionth of the distance from the north pole to the equator. Later, for practical reasons, this Earth standard was abandoned and the meter came to be defined as the distance between two fine lines engraved near the ends of a platinum–iridium bar, the standard meter bar, which was kept at the International Bureau of Weights and Measures near Paris. Accurate copies of the bar were sent to standardizing laboratories throughout the world. These secondary standards were used to produce other, still more accessible standards, so that ultimately every measuring device derived its authority from the standard meter bar through a complicated chain of comparisons. Time Time has two aspects. For civil and some scientific purposes, we want to know the time of day so that we can order events in sequence. In much scientific work, we want to know how long an event lasts. Thus, any time standard must be able to answer two questions: “When did it happen?” and “What is its duration?” Mass • The SI standard of mass is a cylinder of platinum and iridium that is kept at the International bureau of weights and measures near Paris and assigned by international agreements, a mass of 1 kilogram. • The masses of atoms can be compared with one another more precisely than they can be compared with the standard kilogram. For this reason, we have a second mass standard. It is the carbon-12 atom, which, by international agreement, has been assigned a mass of 12 atomic mass units (u) Motion • The world, and everything in it, moves. Even seemingly stationary things, such as a roadway, move with Earth’s rotation, Earth’s orbit around the Sun, the Sun’s orbit around the center of the Milky Way galaxy, and that galaxy’s migration relative to other galaxies. 1. Motion is along a straight line 2. Forces cause motion 3. The moving object is either a particle or and object that moves like a particle Position and Displacement • To locate an object means to find its position relative to some reference point, often the origin (or zero point) of an axis such as the x axis. The positive direction of the axis is in the direction of increasing numbers (coordinates), which is to the right. The opposite is the negative direction. Position and Displacement • Displacement is an example of a vector quantity, which is a quantity that has both a direction and a magnitude. (1) Its magnitude is the distance (such as the number of meters) between the original and final positions. (2) Its direction, from an original position to a final position, can be represented by a plus sign or a minus sign if the motion is along a single axis. Average velocity Actually, several quantities are associated with the phrase “how fast.” One of them is the average velocity vavg, which is the ratio of the displacement x that occurs during a particular time interval t to that interval: Average Speed Average speed savg is a different way of describing “how fast” a particle moves. Whereas the average velocity involves the particle’s displacement x, the average speed involves the total distance covered (for example, the number of meters moved), independent of direction; that is, Example Instantaneous Velocity and Speed • You have now seen two ways to describe how fast something moves: average velocity and average speed, both of which are measured over a time interval t. However, the phrase “how fast” more commonly refers to how fast a particle is moving at a given instant—its instantaneous velocity (or simply velocity) v. • The velocity at any instant is obtained from the average velocity by shrinking the time interval t closer and closer to 0. As t dwindles, the average velocity approaches a limiting value, which is the velocity at that instant: Acceleration Constant Acceleration In many types of motion, the acceleration is either constant or approximately so. For example, you might accelerate a car at an approximately constant rate when a traffic light turns from red to green Free Fall acceleration • If you tossed an object either up or down and could somehow eliminate the effects of air on its flight, you would find that the object accelerates downward at a certain constant rate. That rate is called the free-fall acceleration, and its magnitude is represented by g. The acceleration is independent of the object’s characteristics, such as mass, density, or shape; it is the same for all objects.