Ramp: Forces and Motion
Description
  • Predict, qualitatively, how an external force will affect the speed and direction of an object's motion.
  • Explain the effects with the help of a free body diagram.
  • Use free body diagrams to draw position, velocity, acceleration and force graphs and vice versa.
  • Explain how the graphs relate to one another.
  • Given a scenario or a graph, sketch all four graphs.
Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
pHET Interactive Simulations
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Sam Reid (Developer)
Forces and Motion
Subject and Topic
Description
  • Predict, qualitatively, how an external force will affect the speed and direction of an object's motion.
  • Explain the effects with the help of a free body diagram.
  • Use free body diagrams to draw position, velocity, acceleration and force graphs and vice versa.
  • Explain how the graphs relate to one another.
  • Given a scenario or a graph, sketch all four graphs.
Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
pHET Interactive Simulations
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Noah Podolefsky (Lead)
Plotting projectile displacement, acceleration, and velocity
Description

Plotting projectile displacement, acceleration, and velocity as a function of time.

Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Sal Khan
Calculating velocity using energy
Description

Learn how you can calculate the launch velocity of an object by using the total energy of a system. Energy that is conserved can be transferred within a system from one object to another changing the characteristics of each object, like velocity.

Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Sal Khan
Instantaneous speed and velocity
Description

Instantaneous speed is a measurement of how fast an object is moving at that particular moment. Instantaneous velocity is a vector quantity that includes both the speed and the direction in which the object is moving. Learn how to find an object’s instantaneous speed or velocity in three ways - by using calculus, by looking at the slope of a given point on a graph of an object’s rate vs. time, or by using kinematic formulas if the object’s acceleration is constant. 

Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
Creator/Author
David SantoPietro
Average velocity and speed worked example
Description

Solving a word problem to find average velocity and speed of an object in one-dimension.

Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Sal Khan
Motion in One Dimension
Description

This unit is about how things move along a straight line or, more scientifically, how things move in one dimension. Examples of this would be the movement (motion) of cars along a straight road or of trains along straight railway tracks.

Language
English
Resource Type
Publisher
Department of Higher Education
Publication Date
Creator/Author
Leigh Kleynhans