Calculating Distance for Accelerating Objects

  • Thread starter Rumplestiltskin
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In summary: You are baffled because you don't write down the equations.Using your terminology, we have:for the car, driving at constant speed ##v=12\ m/s##: ##d_c(t)=vt##.For the motorcyclist, driving from rest at constant acceleration ##a=1.5\ m/s²##: ##d_m(t)=\frac{1}{2}at²##.As you are looking for the distance at which they meet, the equation to solve is ##d_c(t)=d_m(t)##.You solved that part correctly, getting 16 seconds for ##t##.Now all you have to do is plug in that value, 16, in the equation you have for ##
  • #1
Rumplestiltskin
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Homework Statement


A car passes through traffic lights as they turn from red to green at a speed of 12ms-1. A motorcyclist, starting from rest, accelerates from the traffic lights in the same direction as the car at 1.5ms-2. After what distance from the lights will they meet? (OPTIONS: 16m, 120m, 168m, 192m).

Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution


12t = d, and 1.5t2 = d.
12t = 1.5t2.
1.5t2 - 12t = 0.
t(1.5t -12) = 0.
t = 0 or 8.

12ms-1 * 8s = 96m. Not an option.
 
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  • #2
Rumplestiltskin said:

Homework Statement


A car passes through traffic lights as they turn from red to green at a speed of 12ms-1. A motorcyclist, starting from rest, accelerates from the traffic lights in the same direction as the car at 1.5ms-2. After what distance from the lights will they meet? (OPTIONS: 16m, 120m, 168m, 192m).

Homework Equations


3. The Attempt at a Solution [/B]
12t = d, and 1.5t2 = d.
12t = 1.5t2.
1.5t2 - 12t = 0.
t(1.5t -12) = 0.
t = 0 or 8.

12ms-1 * 8s = 96m. Not an option.
How did you get 1.5t2 = d?
 
  • #3
Samy_A said:
How did you get 1.5t2 = d?

It's the acceleration, multiplying by t2 will give distance m.
1.5 * 82 = 96m
12 * 8 = 96m
 
  • #4
Rumplestiltskin said:
It's the acceleration, multiplying by t2 will give distance m.
Check your "SUVAT" equations.
 
  • #5
Samy_A said:
Check your "SUVAT" equations.

s = 0.5 * 1.5 * 82 = 48m? Why wouldn't that work in its own right?
48 / 12 = 4s, which is inconsistent.
 
  • #6
Rumplestiltskin said:
s = 0.5 * 1.5 * 82 = 48m? Why wouldn't that work in its own right?
48 / 12 = 4s, which is inconsistent.
Forget that 8.

For the motorcyclist, you now seem to use the equation d=0.5*a*t². That is the correct equation. Now go back to your first post, and use this instead of d=a*t² as you did there.
 
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  • #7
Samy_A said:
Forget that 8.

For the motorcyclist, you now seem to use the equation d=0.5*a*t². That is the correct equation. Now go back to your first post, and use this instead of d=a*t² as you did there.

12t = 0.75t2
0.75t2 - 12t = 0
t(0.75t - 12) = 0
t = 0 or 16.

1.5 * 162 = 384m.
12 * 16 = 192m.
?
 
  • #8
Rumplestiltskin said:
12t = 0.75t2
0.75t2 - 12t = 0
t(0.75t - 12) = 0
t = 0 or 16.

1.5 * 162 = 384m.
12 * 16 = 192m.
?
Almost there. I don't understand what 1.5 * 162 means in this context.
12*16 is the distance traveled by the car as they meet again. Obviously the distance should be the same for the motorcyclist. What was that equation again?
 
  • #9
Samy_A said:
Almost there. I don't understand what 1.5 * 162 means in this context.
12*16 is the distance traveled by the car as they meet again. Obviously the distance should be the same for the motorcyclist. What was that equation again?

It's t2 multiplied by the acceleration of the motorcycle. Since the acceleration is m/s2, shouldn't that function give you a value of some significance?
 
  • #10
Rumplestiltskin said:
It's t2 multiplied by the acceleration of the motorcycle. Since the acceleration is m/s2, shouldn't that function give you a value of some significance?
I don't know if it has any significance, but it is not relevant to the problem.
The distance traveled by the motorcyclist is, as you said yourself, and applied in 12t = 0.75t², given by 0.5*a*t².
 
  • #11
Samy_A said:
I don't know if it has any significance, but it is not relevant to the problem.
The distance traveled by the motorcyclist is, as you said yourself, and applied in 12t = 0.75t², given by 0.5*a*t².

This seems to go against the fundamentals.
If the motorcycle travels a certain distance after time t, t should give you that distance when plugged into ms-2. The seconds squared cancels out. Otherwise the units don't make sense.
 
  • #12
Rumplestiltskin said:
12t = 0.75t2
0.75t2 - 12t = 0
t(0.75t - 12) = 0
t = 0 or 16.

1.5 * 162 = 384m.
12 * 16 = 192m.
?

You forgot that pesky factor "1/2" again!
 
  • #13
Rumplestiltskin said:
This seems to go against the fundamentals.
If the motorcycle travels a certain distance after time t, t should give you that distance when plugged into ms-2. The seconds squared cancels out. Otherwise the units don't make sense.
The correct equation is d=0.5*a*t². The 0.5 has no units.

Recapitulating:
the car has traveled 12*16 m = 192 m when the two meet again.
The motorcyclist obviously has traveled the same distance when they meet again. You could doublecheck this by using the correct formula for the motorcyclist: d=0.5*a*t².
 
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  • #14
Samy_A said:
The correct equation is d=0.5*a*t². The 0.5 has no units.

Recapitulating:
the car has traveled 12*16 m = 192 m when the two meet again.
The motorcyclist obviously has traveled the same distance when they meet again. You could doublecheck this by using the correct formula for the motorcyclist: d=0.5*a*t².

I'm baffled. They will meet at the same time, which is 16s. Therefore plugging this into the acceleration should give me the same distance of 192m. Otherwise the units do not work.
 
  • #15
Rumplestiltskin said:
I'm baffled. They will meet at the same time, which is 16s. Therefore plugging this into the acceleration should give me the same distance of 192m. Otherwise the units do not work.
You are baffled because you don't write down the equations.
Using your terminology, we have:
for the car, driving at constant speed ##v=12\ m/s##: ##d_c(t)=vt##.
For the motorcyclist, driving from rest at constant acceleration ##a=1.5\ m/s²##: ##d_m(t)=\frac{1}{2}at²##.

As you are looking for the distance at which they meet, the equation to solve is ##d_c(t)=d_m(t)##.
You solved that part correctly, getting 16 seconds for ##t##.
Now all you have to do is plug in that value, 16, in the equation you have for ##d_c## or for ##d_m##. You are right, they both should give the same result, and they do.

Looking at dimensions is a good method to check whether a result makes sense. If you are computing a distance, and find a value in seconds, you know something went wrong.
But dimensions being correct is a necessary condition, not a sufficient one.
If a is an acceleration, and t a time, at² will be a value in meters. That is correct. But so will 10at², or 100at². All the products of at² with a dimensionless constant will give a value in meters. There is only one that gives you the distance traveled from rest when a is a constant acceleration: ##\frac{1}{2}at²##. The "pesky" ½ Ray mentioned.

That's why the exercise template contains a section "Relevant equations". Had you looked them up, written them down, and used them in the calculation, you would have solved this exercise in post 1.
 
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  • #16
Samy_A said:
You are baffled because you don't write down the equations.
Using your terminology, we have:
for the car, driving at constant speed ##v=12\ m/s##: ##d_c(t)=vt##.
For the motorcyclist, driving from rest at constant acceleration ##a=1.5\ m/s²##: ##d_m(t)=\frac{1}{2}at²##.

As you are looking for the distance at which they meet, the equation to solve is ##d_c(t)=d_m(t)##.
You solved that part correctly, getting 16 seconds for ##t##.
Now all you have to do is plug in that value, 16, in the equation you have for ##d_c## or for ##d_m##. You are right, they both should give the same result, and they do.

Looking at dimensions is a good method to check whether a result makes sense. If you are computing a distance, and find a value in seconds, you know something went wrong.
But dimensions being correct is a necessary condition, not a sufficient one.
If a is an acceleration, and t a time, at² will be a value in meters. That is correct. But so will 10at², or 100at². All the products of at² with a dimensionless constant will give a value in meters. There is only one that gives you the distance traveled from rest when a is a constant acceleration: ##\frac{1}{2}at²##. The "pesky" ½ Ray mentioned.

That's why the exercise template contains a section "Relevant equations". Had you looked them up, written them down, and used them in the calculation, you would have solved this exercise in post 1.

I'm familiar enough with suvat, I just wasn't expecting to use it in this question, partly because of its mark count and partly because this is the first instance I've needed to use it outside of projectile motion.

Thanks for the explanation. It's beginning to make sense, though I'm still shaken up. I thought it was a given that plugging values into any unit will always give you the corresponding values; if you input the time in seconds for ms-2, you will arrive at the metres traveled in that time. It seems arbitrary that it only outputs half the distance traveled in any time you input.
 
  • #17
Rumplestiltskin said:
I'm familiar enough with suvat, I just wasn't expecting to use it in this question, partly because of its mark count and partly because this is the first instance I've needed to use it outside of projectile motion.

Thanks for the explanation. It's beginning to make sense, though I'm still shaken up. I thought it was a given that plugging values into any unit will always give you the corresponding values; if you input the time in seconds for ms-2, you will arrive at the metres traveled in that time. It seems arbitrary that it only outputs half the distance traveled in any time you input.
It's not arbitrary, it follows from the definitions of velocity and acceleration.

Let's take the case of the motorcyclist, traveling from rest in a straight line with constant acceleration a.
By definition, the acceleration is the rate of change of the velocity with respect of time.
So ##\frac{dv}{dt}=a##, which gives ##v(t)=v_0 +at##. For the motorcyclist ##v_0=0##, so ##v(t)=at##.
Similarly, velocity is the rate of change of position with respect of time.
This give ##\frac{ds}{dt}=v(t)=at##. Integrating this then gives ##s(t)=s_0+\frac{1}{2}at²##. There you have that ½, a direct consequence of two basic definitions.
For the motorcyclist, ##s_0=0##, so we finally get ##s(t)=\frac{1}{2}at²##.

(The more general 3-d equations are derived similarly.)
 

1. What is the formula for calculating distance, speed, and time?

The formula for calculating distance, speed, and time is d = s x t, where d is distance, s is speed, and t is time. This formula is known as the distance formula.

2. How do I convert between units of distance, speed, and time?

To convert between units of distance, speed, and time, you can use the following relationships: 1 kilometer (km) = 1000 meters (m), 1 hour (h) = 60 minutes (min), and 1 minute (min) = 60 seconds (s). For example, if you want to convert 5 kilometers per hour (km/h) to meters per second (m/s), you would multiply 5 km/h by 1000 m/km and divide by 60 min/h and 60 s/min to get 1.39 m/s.

3. How does changing speed affect the time it takes to travel a certain distance?

Changing speed affects the time it takes to travel a certain distance in a linear relationship. This means that as speed increases, the time it takes to travel a certain distance decreases, and vice versa. For example, if it takes 2 hours to travel 100 kilometers at a speed of 50 km/h, it would only take 1 hour to travel the same distance at a speed of 100 km/h.

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

Average speed is the total distance traveled divided by the total time taken, regardless of any changes in speed during the journey. Instantaneous speed, on the other hand, is the speed at a specific moment in time. It can be calculated by dividing the distance traveled in a small time interval by that time interval. Average speed is used to describe overall travel, while instantaneous speed is used to describe specific moments within that travel.

5. How does distance affect the speed at which an object is traveling?

The distance an object travels does not directly affect its speed. However, the time it takes to travel a certain distance does affect the average speed of the object. For example, if two objects travel the same distance but one takes longer to do so, the object that took longer has a slower average speed. In other words, the distance is a factor in calculating speed, but it does not directly affect the speed itself.

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