Particle Position & Velocity: Solving s=5i+4r^2j

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves the position of a particle described by the equation s=5i+4r^2j, where i and j are perpendicular unit vectors. Participants are tasked with calculating the particle's position at a specific time, determining average velocity over an interval, and finding instantaneous velocity at another time.

Discussion Character

  • Mixed

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the calculation of position and velocities, with some attempting to clarify the vector nature of position and average velocity. Questions arise regarding the need to express direction and angles in the answers.

Discussion Status

Some participants provide calculations for position and average velocity, while others question the correctness of these calculations and the notation used. There is an ongoing exploration of how to properly represent vector quantities and their components.

Contextual Notes

Participants note potential confusion regarding the dimensionality of the motion, as the thread title suggests one-dimensional motion, while the problem involves two-dimensional vector quantities.

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Homework Statement



The position s (in metres) of a particle, as a function of time t (in seconds), is described by the equation s=5i+4r^2j. i and j are perpendicular unit vectors.
a) Calculate the position of the particle at t=5.
b) Determine the particle's average velocity between t=0 and t=2.
c) Determine the particle's instantaneous velocity at t=4.


The Attempt at a Solution



a) When t=5,
s=5i+4(25)j=5i+100j
s=√10025=100m

b) When t=0,
s=5i=5m
When t=2,
s=5i+4(4)j=5i+16j=√281=16.76m

average velocity=displacement/time=(16.76-5)/(2-0)=5.9m/s

c) By differentiation,
v=4(2)tj=8tj
When t=4,
v=8(4)tj=32j=32m/s
 
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scrubber said:
a) When t=5,
s=5i+4(25)j=5i+100j
s=√10025=100m

Hi,

The position of a particle is a vector right? √(52+1002) is the distance.

scrubber said:
b) When t=0,
s=5i=5m
When t=2,
s=5i+4(4)j=5i+16j=√281=16.76m

average velocity=displacement/time=(16.76-5)/(2-0)=5.9m/s

Again, average velocity is a vector. Displacement is the vector difference of the final and initial positions.
 
Sunil Simha said:
Hi,

The position of a particle is a vector right? √(52+1002) is the distance.



Again, average velocity is a vector. Displacement is the vector difference of the final and initial positions.

Thanks for your reply.

Do you mean I have to give the direction as well? The angles?
For a),
tanθ=100/5, θ=1.5°
Therefore, the position is 100m 1.5°

And for b), tanβ=16/5, β=1.3o
Therefore, the average velocity is 5.9m/s 1.3°

Like these?
 
Your answer is right for part (A) but not for part (b).

In part (b), you are supposed to find \frac{\vec{s_2}-\vec{s_1}}{Δt}. You just have to subtract each component (i.e. like final x-initial x and final y- initial y) separately and then divide the resultant vector by t. Your answer should look like \frac{(x_2-x_1)\hat{i}+(y_2-y_1)\hat{j}}{Δt}.
 
You made a mistake on part b because yo wrote
s=5i=5m
Never ever do that.
either something is a vector (5i is a vector), or something is a scalar (5m is a scalar). But something cannot be both a scalar and a vector at the same time, so the equation 5i=5m makes no sense. if s is a vector than you should denote that somehow. One common convention is to use boldface so your equation should look like this
s=5i
|s|=5m.

Always make sure to do that (even on your scraps that you're going to throw away anyways).
 
One more thing. This is a 2-D motion but the title of the thread says 1-D motion.
 

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