Calculating Average Speed and Velocity for a Honeybee's Round Trip

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In summary, a honeybee travels a total distance of 12 km and has a displacement of 0 when flying from its hive to a flower 6 km away and back. The average speed of the bee is undefined, while the average velocity is 0 m/s. The units can be changed to meters per second for a more applicable measurement.
  • #1
ugkwan
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A honeybee leaves the hive, flies in a straight line to a flower 6 km away in 10 min, and then takes 10 minutes to return (also in a straight line).

a.) Please find the distance traveled and displacement for the entire trip:
distance travelled:
I know the distance total is 12 km

displacement: 0

b.) Please find the average speed and average velocity for the entire trip:
average speed:
This is where I get confused. Total distance/rate of change in meters = Average speed. This would mean the speed is undefined.

average velocity:
Same confusion because the algebra would mean this question is undefined with a displacement of zero.
 
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  • #2
Velocity = distance / time. As long as your time is not zero, it is defined. It's only the denominator that needs to be non-zero.

The average speed is the total distance traveled divided by total time spent traveling.

The velocity is similar, only it involves the total distance traveled in a direction - that is, the velocity on the way back will be the same as on the way out, only negative.
 
  • #3
Thanks for the correction. I now see that I had the formula wrong. So it is displacement over time, and time is 20 minutes. So velocity is 0/20 and speed is 12/20.
 
  • #4
That is correct, but they're funny units (kilometres per minute?).

To change to a more physics-y, SI unit, try metres per second:

(12km*1000 m km^-1)/(12mins*60 s min^-1)

=12000/720= whatever it is.
 
  • #5
They do that deliberately: that is phrase the question in unweildy units, this makes you render more applicable units by the simple fact of expedience.
 

1. What is the difference between speed and velocity?

Speed is a scalar quantity that refers to how fast an object is moving, while velocity is a vector quantity that specifies both the speed and direction of an object's motion.

2. How is average speed/velocity calculated?

The average speed/velocity is calculated by dividing the total distance traveled by the total time taken. It is represented by the formula: average speed/velocity = total distance / total time.

3. What is the difference between average speed and instantaneous speed?

Average speed refers to the overall rate of change of an object's position over a period of time, while instantaneous speed refers to the speed of an object at a specific moment in time.

4. Can the average speed/velocity of an object be negative?

Yes, the average speed/velocity of an object can be negative if the object is moving in the opposite direction of its initial position. Negative velocity indicates motion in the negative direction of a chosen coordinate system.

5. How does average speed/velocity differ from constant speed/velocity?

While average speed/velocity refers to the overall rate of change of an object's position over a period of time, constant speed/velocity refers to the rate of change of an object's position that remains the same throughout its motion, without any acceleration or deceleration.

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