Calculate Acceleration & Velocity of Motion Under Gravity

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To calculate acceleration and velocity from the provided data, the equations of motion under gravity can be applied. The distance and time data allows for the calculation of velocity between intervals, revealing that velocity changes over time, indicating acceleration. For example, using the first two data points, the initial velocity can be calculated as 5.6 m/s, and subsequent calculations show an acceleration of -17 m/s². The discussion emphasizes the need for multiple time intervals to accurately derive acceleration and velocity from discrete data points. Understanding these calculations is essential for analyzing motion under gravity effectively.
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I would really appreciate some help on this please:

Distance in metres
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
1

Time talen to travel distance (in seconds)

0.72
1.28
1.67
1.85
2.08
2.50
2.83
3.01
3.13
3.25

What would you expect the accelartion to be and also what would you expect the velocity to be?

Mass = 0.164 Kg

Inital velocity = 0.

The experiment was letting a cylinder roll down the ramp and the data is above.

I just can't seem to calculate the acceleration and velocity could someone please help me thank you very much (much appreciated).
 
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You know that:
x(t) = x_0 + v_0t + \frac{1}{2}at^2
You have three variables, x0, v0 and a. You already know that x0 and v0 are zero, so that leaves you with:
x(t) = \frac{1}{2}at^2
To find the acceleration just use one of the measurements, for example 1m and 3.25s:
1m = \frac{1}{2}a(3.25s)^2
As for calculating the velocity, that is just:
v(t) = v_0 + at
The value of t varies depending on when you want to find the velocity.
 
At the last point the final velocity, so what would the acceleration be, not to clude up on the equation(s).

Thank you very much
 
Anybody please tyty.
 
I don't understand your questions.
 
In a discrete set of data, acceleration will require two time intervals, since it is a second order derivative.

(note: position is zeroth order, and does not require an interval, just a point; velocity is first order, and therefore requires one time interval, that is, two points; every order of time derivative, requires that many time intervals to specify)

You have 9 time intervals, so, you have 8 meaningful accelerations. I'll give you an example:

(t,x)0 = (0.1,0.72)
(t,x)1 = (0.2,1.28)
(t,x)2 = (0.3,1.67)

This gives you three positions (three null intervals), two velocities (2 x 1 interval), and one acceleration (1 x 2 intervals). The velocity is the space interval divided by the time interval from one point to the next:

v0 = (x1 - x0)/(t1 - t0) = (1.28 - 0.72)/(0.2 - 0.1) = 5.6
v1 = (x2 - x1)/(t2 - t1) = (1.67 - 1.28)/(0.3 - 0.1) = 3.9

Notice that the velocity is changing, thus, there is an acceleration.

a0 = (v1 - v0)/(t1 - t0) = (3.9 - 5.6)/(0.2 - 0.1) = -17

There are also other ways to do it.


Notice the similarity in:

x'(t) = lim(as dt -> 0){x(t+dt)-x(t)}/{(t+dt)-t}

The discrete treatment given above is a consequence of not taking the limit.
 
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