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Physical Science-Chapter 11 

Kinematics

11A Describing Position

  • Wandering Planets

    • Mechanics: the study of motion

    • Kinematics: the study of how things move

    • Dynamics: the branch of physics that studies forces and how they can change an object’s motion

  • History of Mechanics

    • Retrograde Motion: the apparent motion of some planets in which they appear to slow down, stop, reverse their direction, and then resume their normal motion

    • Quantum Mechanics: the branch of physics that explores the behavior of matter and energy at the atomic and subatomic level

    • Relativistic Mechanics: the study of the motion of objects whose speeds are near the speed of light

  • Frame of Reference

    • Frame of reference: a coordinate system used to describe the motion of an object

  • Distance and Displacement

    • Distance: how far an object moves during a time interval

    • Displacement: a vector quantity that describes a change in position

  • Scalars and Vectors

    • Scalar: a measurable quantity that consists of magnitude (size) only

    • Vector: a measurable quantity with both magnitude and direction

11B Describing Motion

  • Speed: a scalar quantity indicating the rate at which an object moves

  • Velocity: a vector quantity indicating the rate at which an object’s position changes

  • Momentum

    • Momentum: a property of a moving system that is equal to its velocity times its mass

    • Conservation of Momentum: states that within a closed system - a system that is isolated from outside. pushes or pulls - the total momentum remains constant

11C Changing Motion

  • Acceleration: the rate of change in velocity

  • Free Fall: the motion of an object that falls due to gravity alone, with no other forces acting on it

  • Two-Dimensional Motion

    • Circular Motion: movement along a circular path

    • Centripetal Acceleration: acceleration that causes an object to move along along a circular path

    • Projectile Motion: the two-dimensional motion of any flying object whose path is determined by the influence of an external force only, such as gravity

    • Trajectory: the curved path of a projectile

MK

Physical Science-Chapter 11 

Kinematics

11A Describing Position

  • Wandering Planets

    • Mechanics: the study of motion

    • Kinematics: the study of how things move

    • Dynamics: the branch of physics that studies forces and how they can change an object’s motion

  • History of Mechanics

    • Retrograde Motion: the apparent motion of some planets in which they appear to slow down, stop, reverse their direction, and then resume their normal motion

    • Quantum Mechanics: the branch of physics that explores the behavior of matter and energy at the atomic and subatomic level

    • Relativistic Mechanics: the study of the motion of objects whose speeds are near the speed of light

  • Frame of Reference

    • Frame of reference: a coordinate system used to describe the motion of an object

  • Distance and Displacement

    • Distance: how far an object moves during a time interval

    • Displacement: a vector quantity that describes a change in position

  • Scalars and Vectors

    • Scalar: a measurable quantity that consists of magnitude (size) only

    • Vector: a measurable quantity with both magnitude and direction

11B Describing Motion

  • Speed: a scalar quantity indicating the rate at which an object moves

  • Velocity: a vector quantity indicating the rate at which an object’s position changes

  • Momentum

    • Momentum: a property of a moving system that is equal to its velocity times its mass

    • Conservation of Momentum: states that within a closed system - a system that is isolated from outside. pushes or pulls - the total momentum remains constant

11C Changing Motion

  • Acceleration: the rate of change in velocity

  • Free Fall: the motion of an object that falls due to gravity alone, with no other forces acting on it

  • Two-Dimensional Motion

    • Circular Motion: movement along a circular path

    • Centripetal Acceleration: acceleration that causes an object to move along along a circular path

    • Projectile Motion: the two-dimensional motion of any flying object whose path is determined by the influence of an external force only, such as gravity

    • Trajectory: the curved path of a projectile