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1-D Motion - General
We consider now the motion of a pint particle in one dimension, which can occur either because the particle is constrained to move along a track, or because we restrict attention of one Cartesian component of a particle's motion. In general, the force applied to this particle can vary arbitrarily with time. Hence the particle will have time-varying acceleration in proportion, a(t). The resulting motion may then be found using calculus: the velocity v(t) is the integral of the acceleration a(t) plus the velocity at the start of the interval of integration. Mathematically we'd say that the arbitrary constant of integration is constrained by the initial condition on the velocity. To get x(t) we integrate v(t) and add the initial position.
The quantities v(t) and a(t) are important in physics because these mathematically defined quantities appear in experimentally discovered physical laws. The acceleration is related to the force applied via F=ma, and the velocity determines things like the Doppler Shift and the pressure measured in a Pitot tube - those little bent tubes that stick out of fuselage of an airplane and are bent to face into the airflow so that a pressure-measuring instrument can determine the plane's airspeed.
In our hierarchy of models there are two mutually exclusive special cases: Simple Harmonic Motion caused by a restoring force that varies linearly with the particle's displacement from some center of force, and Motion with Constant Acceleration, caused by a constant force. Motion with Constant Velocity is a special case of Motion with Constant Acceleration specified by the constraint a(t) = 0.
Introduction to the ModelDescription and AssumptionsThis model is applicable to a single point particle subject to an acceleration that is constrained to one dimension and which is either parallel to or anti-parallel to the particle's initial velocity. Learning ObjectivesStudents will be assumed to understand this model who can:
S.I.M. Structure of the ModelCompatible SystemsA single point particle (or a system treated as a point particle with position specified by the center of mass). Relevant InteractionsSome time-varying external influence that is confined to one dimension. Laws of ChangeMathematical RepresentationDifferential Forms![]()
![]() Integral Forms![]()
![]() Diagrammatic Representations
Relevant ExamplesAll Examples Relevant to the Model
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