Is The Velocity Of This Object Increasing Or Decreasing?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around interpreting a time-velocity graph in the context of 8th grade physics. Participants are tasked with determining whether the velocity of an object is increasing or decreasing based on the graph provided.

Discussion Character

  • Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking, Mixed

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Some participants explore the distinction between positive/negative velocity and increasing/decreasing velocity. Others discuss the implications of the slope of the graph and its relation to acceleration.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with the problem, questioning assumptions about velocity and direction. There is a mix of interpretations regarding the relationship between velocity, speed, and the graph's slope. Some guidance has been offered regarding the definitions of velocity and acceleration, but no consensus has been reached.

Contextual Notes

There are mentions of potential confusion due to the graph's representation and the terminology used, particularly regarding the definitions of velocity and speed. The discussion also highlights the importance of understanding the context of motion in one-dimensional space.

kingandsona
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Homework Statement


Hi everyone,
8th grade physics teacher here.

We are doing a handout where we have to identify time-velocity graphs with descriptions. Can you help me with this one?

https://imgur.com/a/vEIkg


A) The velocity is increasing at a uniform rate.
B) The velocity is decreasing at a uniform rate.

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution



At first I thought it was decreasing but then an 8th grade student said 1) the slope is positive and 2) if you continue the line after the x-axis it will be increasing. Also, the Vf is literally higher on the y-axis than Vi.dd

I think the same question could be raised about displacement that is negative but with a positive slope approaching the x-axis. The displacement on the y-axis would be going up, but it is decreasing since it's getting closer to the starting point.

Let me know your thoughts!
 
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yPBCObO.png

You want to clearly distinguish "is positive/negative" from "is increasing/decreasing"

Positive velocity means "is moving in the positive direction"
Negative velocity means "is moving in the negative direction" (backwards, if you want)

The plot describes a velocity that is negative at the start but becomes more and more positive as time proceeds. The straight line shows that it increases at a uniform rate (+1 unit per +2 time units)

Ah, and: hello king&sonA, :welcome: . Happy teaching :rolleyes: !
 

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kingandsona said:

Homework Statement


Hi everyone,
8th grade physics teacher here.

We are doing a handout where we have to identify time-velocity graphs with descriptions. Can you help me with this one?

https://imgur.com/a/vEIkg


A) The velocity is increasing at a uniform rate.
B) The velocity is decreasing at a uniform rate.

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution



At first I thought it was decreasing but then an 8th grade student said 1) the slope is positive and 2) if you continue the line after the x-axis it will be increasing. Also, the Vf is literally higher on the y-axis than Vi.dd

I think the same question could be raised about displacement that is negative but with a positive slope approaching the x-axis. The displacement on the y-axis would be going up, but it is decreasing since it's getting closer to the starting point.

Let me know your thoughts!

Velocity can be positive or negative, and is negative in your graph. However, speed is the magnitude of velocity, so is always >= 0.

In your case, velocity is increasing and speed is decreasing.
 
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In the case of 2d or 3d motion there would be no "positive" and "negative" directions, so in that case any motion with decreasing speed could also be described as having a decreasing velocity.
 
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Look at the graph of again, think of it this way. First the car is moving in the backward direction as the velocity is negative, but then it's slowing down as the velocity in the negative direction is decreasing in magnitude and then comes to a halt after some time. The negative sign just tells you the direction of motion in 1D. Why are you looking at the slope? This is not position time graph . The slope of velocity time graph gives you acceleration and the acceleration in this case is constant.
 
NoahCygnus said:
Look at the graph of again, think of it this way. First the car is moving in the backward direction as the velocity is negative, but then it's slowing down as the velocity in the negative direction is decreasing in magnitude and then comes to a halt after some time. The negative sign just tells you the direction of motion in 1D. Why are you looking at the slope? This is not position time graph . The slope of velocity time graph gives you acceleration and the acceleration in this case is constant.

He is looking at the slope because that tells him the rate of increase or decrease in velocity
 
Ray Vickson said:
He is looking at the slope because that tells him the rate of increase or decrease in velocity
Well in that case the acceleration is a constant and positive, the velocity is negative so the velocity will decrease and hit zero and then start increasing at a constant rate in the positive direction.
 
NoahCygnus said:
Well in that case the acceleration is a constant and positive, the velocity is negative so the velocity will decrease
No, the magnitude of the velocity (i.e. the speed) will decrease, but the velocity becomes less negative, so is increasing.
 
haruspex said:
No, the magnitude of the velocity (i.e. the speed) will decrease, but the velocity becomes less negative, so is increasing.
That is what I said in my first post.
NoahCygnus said:
the velocity in the negative direction is decreasing in magnitude
 
  • #10
NoahCygnus said:
That is what I said in my first post.
But in post #7 you wrote
NoahCygnus said:
the velocity will decrease
which is incorrect.
Besides "velocity in the negative direction" doesn't really mean anything. By definition, velocity is measured in the positive direction.
 
  • #11
haruspex said:
But in post #7 you wrote

which is incorrect.
Will decrease in magnitude in the negative direction. I guess it wasn't self explanatory that by saying "Velocity will decrease", I meant it will decrease it's magnitude in the negative direction and hit zero and then increase its magnitude again but the direction of the velocity vector will be the positive direction.
 
  • #12
NoahCygnus said:
I guess it wasn't self explanatory that by saying "Velocity will decrease"
Whatever you intended, the statement "Velocity will decrease" is simply wrong. These are well-defined terms. If you meant something else then you used the wrong terminology.
 
  • #13
NoahCygnus said:
Well in that case the acceleration is a constant and positive, the velocity is negative so the velocity will decrease and hit zero and then start increasing at a constant rate in the positive direction.

You cannot say that because you have no way of knowing what the graph looks like outside the region plotted.
 
  • #14
What you all missed is that this post is identical, word for word, to the one below from the 19th of December.
 
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  • #15
Why so it is. Different author names, but identical post. How droll.
 
  • #16
NoahCygnus said:
Look at the graph of again, think of it this way. First the car is moving in the backward direction ...
Funny you bring in the word "car" -- I didn't see it anywhere
 
  • #17
BvU said:
Funny you bring in the word "car" -- I didn't see it anywhere
So just because it's not given in the problem I can't assume the particle undergoing motion is a car. All right.
 
  • #18
It might seem strange but the direction you define as "positive" determines if the velocity is increasing or decreasing.
 
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