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

  • Thread starter Thread starter ugkwan
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Average
AI Thread Summary
The honeybee travels a total distance of 12 km during its round trip, with a displacement of 0 km since it returns to the starting point. Average speed is calculated as total distance divided by total time, resulting in 12 km/20 min, which can be converted to 1 km/min or 1000 m/min. Average velocity, defined as displacement over time, is 0 km/20 min, leading to an average velocity of 0. The discussion highlights the importance of using appropriate units for clarity, suggesting conversion to meters per second for a more standardized measurement. Understanding these concepts is crucial for accurately calculating speed and velocity in physics.
ugkwan
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
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.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
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.
 
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.
 
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.
 
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.
 
Thread 'Variable mass system : water sprayed into a moving container'
Starting with the mass considerations #m(t)# is mass of water #M_{c}# mass of container and #M(t)# mass of total system $$M(t) = M_{C} + m(t)$$ $$\Rightarrow \frac{dM(t)}{dt} = \frac{dm(t)}{dt}$$ $$P_i = Mv + u \, dm$$ $$P_f = (M + dm)(v + dv)$$ $$\Delta P = M \, dv + (v - u) \, dm$$ $$F = \frac{dP}{dt} = M \frac{dv}{dt} + (v - u) \frac{dm}{dt}$$ $$F = u \frac{dm}{dt} = \rho A u^2$$ from conservation of momentum , the cannon recoils with the same force which it applies. $$\quad \frac{dm}{dt}...
Back
Top