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DEC 1013 ENGINEERING SCIENCES 2. KINEMATICS AND KINETICS NAZARIN B. NORDIN [email protected]

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DEC 1013 ENGINEERING SCIENCEs. 2. KINEMATICS AND KINETICS. NAZARIN B. NORDIN [email protected]. What you will learn:. Distance and displacement Speed and velocity Acceleration Distance vs. time graph: interpret slope as speed - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

DEC 1013ENGINEERING SCIENCES

2. KINEMATICS AND KINETICS

NAZARIN B. [email protected]

Page 2: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

What you will learn:

• Distance and displacement• Speed and velocity• Acceleration• Distance vs. time graph: interpret slope as speed• Velocity vs. time graph: interpret slope as

acceleration; area under graph as distance moved• Rotational kinematics• Angular velocity and angular acceleration

Page 3: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Distance & Displacement

• Distance is the actual length measured of a particular path taken.

• Displacement is the length and direction of a straight line drawn from the start to finish.

Page 4: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Cont..• Distance and displacement are two quantities which may

seem to mean the same thing, yet they have distinctly different meanings and definitions.

• Distance (d) is a scalar quantity which refers to "how far an object has moved" during its motion.

• Displacement (d) is a vector quantity which refers to "how far an object is from its original position"; it is the object's change in position.

Page 5: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Displacement

Page 6: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Speed & Velocity

Page 7: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

• Illustration of distinction between velocity and speed

Page 8: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs
Page 9: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Acceleration

Page 10: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity.

Example 2-1: Average acceleration.

A car accelerates along a straight road from rest to 90 km/h in 5.0 s. What is the magnitude of its average acceleration?

Page 11: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Motion along x-axis

Page 12: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Interpreting Graph

• Distance vs time graph

Page 13: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Interpreting graph• Velocity vs time graph

Page 14: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Unit Conversion

Page 15: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs
Page 16: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Rotational kinematics

Page 17: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Rotational kinematics

Page 18: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Angular motion

• Angular velocity

Page 19: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Angular motion

• Angular acceleration

Page 20: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Angular motion

• ROTATIONAL MOTION UNDER CONSTANT ANGULAR ACCELERATION

Page 21: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Problem solving

Page 22: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Problem solving

Page 23: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Summary of Chapter 2 (p.1)• Kinematics is the description of how objects

move with respect to a defined reference frame.

• Displacement is the change in position of an object.

• Average speed is the distance traveled divided by the time it took; average velocity is the displacement divided by the time.

• Instantaneous velocity is the average velocity in the limit as the time becomes infinitesimally short.

Page 24: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Summary of Chapter 2 (p.2)

• Average acceleration is the change in velocity divided by the time.

• Instantaneous acceleration is the average acceleration in the limit as the time interval becomes infinitesimally small.

• The equations of motion for constant acceleration are given in the text; there are four, each one of which requires a different set of quantities.

Page 25: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Topic 2.6/2.7

Uniform Circular Motion

Page 26: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Ө = angular position (angle)

ω = angular velocity (rate at which an angle changes)

α = angular acceleration

Easy ways of relating angular kinematics to rotational kinematics:s = r Ө v = r ω a = r α

Also, v =

Page 27: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Linear Kinematics:

x = ½at2 + v0t + x0

v = at + v0

v2 = 2a∆x + v02

Look similar? They are.

Rotational Kinematics:

θ = ½αt2 + ω0t + θ 0

ω = αt + ω0

ω2 = 2α∆ θ + ω02

Page 28: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

From the results of the lab, we can find that Fc =

Page 29: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Whenever an object is moving in a circle, the forces acting on it cause the object to move in a circle.

As such, the net force is the centripetal force.

ΣF = Fc

Page 30: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Example

A 1500kg car drives over the top of a hill at a constant 20m/s. If the radius of curvature for the hill is 60m,

1) Sketch a free-body diagram of this situation.

2) Solve for the centripetal force on the car.

3) What is the magnitude of the normal force on the car?

Page 31: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

2) Fc =

=

3) ΣF = Fc = Fg – FN

FN = mg – FC

FN = 14,700N - 10,000N FN = 4,700N

We know the centripetal force isdownward because the center of the circle is below the car. The only forces acting on the carare gravity and the normal force.The mg is greater than the normalforce, and the arrows show it.

Page 32: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Torqueτ = r x F

Or for those who may not know cross-products,

τ = rF sin (Ө)

τ (tau) stands for torque. It is equal to the radius from the fulcrum times the force times the sine of the angle between the radius and the torque.

Units for torque are Nm

Clockwise is negative and counterclockwise is positive (just like angles)

Page 33: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Torque Example

You apply a force of 20N to a 10cm long wrench at a30 degree angle. Solve for the torque.

τ = rF sin (Ө) τ = (0.1m)(20N) sin (60) τ = 1.73 N*m

Page 34: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Torque and Force

∑F = Fnet

For a non-accelerating system, ∑F = Fnet = 0

At the same time, ∑ τ = τ net

For a non-rotating system, ∑ τ = τ net = 0

Page 35: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Example

A meter stick has a fulcrum placed at the 50cm mark. An object that weighs 20N is hung from it 20cm from the center.

What force would you have to apply on the other side of the meter stick 30cm from the fulcrum to keep the meter stick from rotating?

∑ τ = τ person - τweight = 0 F(0.3m)-(0.2m)(20N)=0

F=13.3N

Page 36: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Rotational DynamicsThe equation describing most situations in this section is:

∑ τ = I α

The sum of torques is equal to the moment of inertia times angular acceleration.

Page 37: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Moment of Inertia

Moment of inertia of an object tells you how difficult it is to make the object rotate.

In general, I = mr2

That is true for each individual mass, but an entire system of masses can be more complicated.

Page 38: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Some commonly used moments of inertia are:

I = mr2 for a point mass I = ½ mr2 for a discI = 1/3 mr2 for a rod rotating around its end

Page 39: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

You exert a 60N force at the end of a 3m long rod. The rod has a mass of 20kg. Assuming the rod is rotating about its end (the circle in the picture),

a) Calculate the moment of inertia of the rod.

b) Calculate the net torque on the rod.

c) What is the angular acceleration of the rod?

Page 40: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

a) This is a rod rotating about its end, so I = 1/3 mr2 . = 1/3(20kg)(3m) 2

= 60 kg*m2

b) τ = rF sin (Ө) = (3m)(60N)sin(90)=180Nm

c) ∑ τ = I α180Nm = 60(kgm2) α α = 30 rad/s2

Page 41: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Angular Momentum

Angular momentum is another quantity that is conserved in physics.

Always:L = I ω

For each individual point, L = mrv. Depending on the shape of the entire rotating object, there may be a coefficient.

Page 42: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

ExampleA ball is tied to a pole with a string that is 2m long and is orbiting the pole. The initial speed of the ball is 6m/s. What is the distance of the ball from the pole when its speed is 20m/s?

L1 = L2

I1 ω1 = I2 ω2 or mr1v1 = mr2v2

mr12(v1/r1) = mr2

2(v2/r2)r1v1 = r2v2

(2m)(6m/s) = r2 (20m/s)r2 = 0.6m/s

Page 43: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

Linear Kinematics:

x = ½at2 + v0t + x0

v = at + v0

v2 = 2a∆x + v02

∑ F = map = mvEk = ½ mv2

Rotational Kinematics:

θ = ½αt2 + ω0t + θ 0

ω = αt + ω0

ω2 = 2α∆ θ + ω02

∑ τ = I αL = I ωEk = ½ I ω 2

Page 44: DEC  1013 ENGINEERING  SCIENCEs

THANK YOU