This MCQ module is based on: Position Velocity
Position Velocity
This assessment will be based on: Position Velocity
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Position Velocity
2.1 Introduction
Motion is one of the most common phenomena around us. People walking, vehicles on roads, the flow of blood through arteries, the orbit of the Earth around the Sun — all are examples of bodies in motion. The branch of physics that deals with describing motion without investigating its causes is called kinematics.
In this chapter, we focus on motion along a straight line — the simplest type of motion. An object is treated as a point object when its size is negligibly small compared to the distance it moves. For instance, a car covering hundreds of kilometres can be treated as a point, while a train entering a 50-metre platform cannot (its length is comparable to the distance).
2.2 Position, Path Length and Displacement
To describe the motion of an object along a straight line, we first choose a convenient point as the origin (O) and define a positive direction. The position of the object is then its distance from the origin, with a sign indicating direction.
Path Length (Distance)
Path length is the total distance covered by the object along its actual route. It is a scalar (no direction) and is always non-negative.
Displacement
Displacement is the change in position of the object:
Displacement is a vector — it can be positive, negative, or zero. A crucial relationship links displacement and path length:
Worked Example 1: Distance vs Displacement
A jogger runs 400 m due east and then 300 m due west. Find (a) the path length, and (b) the displacement.
Taking east as positive direction:
(a) Path length = total distance covered = 400 + 300 = \(\boxed{700 \text{ m}}\)
(b) Displacement = final position − initial position
Final position from origin = 400 − 300 = +100 m
\[\Delta x = +100 - 0 = \boxed{+100 \text{ m (east)}}\]
Notice: path length (700 m) > |displacement| (100 m), confirming \(|\Delta x| \le \text{path length}\).
2.3 Average Velocity and Average Speed
Average velocity is defined as the displacement per unit time:
Average speed is the total path length divided by total time:
Worked Example 2 (NCERT Example 2.1): Car Journey
A car moves along a straight road. It covers 360 m from O to A in 18 minutes, then reverses and travels 120 m from A to B in 6 minutes. Find (a) average velocity, and (b) average speed for the entire trip.
Given: O is the origin. Position of A = +360 m. The car reverses 120 m, so position of B = 360 − 120 = +240 m.
Total time = 18 + 6 = 24 min = 24 × 60 = 1440 s
(a) Average velocity: \[\bar{v} = \frac{\Delta x}{\Delta t} = \frac{x_B - x_O}{\Delta t} = \frac{240 - 0}{1440} = \frac{240}{1440}\] \[\boxed{\bar{v} = 0.167 \text{ m/s} \approx \frac{1}{6} \text{ m/s}}\]
(b) Average speed: \[\text{Average speed} = \frac{\text{Total path length}}{\Delta t} = \frac{360 + 120}{1440} = \frac{480}{1440}\] \[\boxed{\text{Average speed} = 0.333 \text{ m/s} = \frac{1}{3} \text{ m/s}}\]
As expected, average speed (0.333 m/s) > average velocity (0.167 m/s).
Worked Example 3: Two-Part Journey at Different Speeds
A cyclist covers the first half of a distance at 20 km/h and the second half at 30 km/h. Find the average speed for the whole journey.
Let total distance = \(2d\). Each half = \(d\).
Time for first half: \(t_1 = \frac{d}{20}\)
Time for second half: \(t_2 = \frac{d}{30}\)
Total time: \(t = t_1 + t_2 = \frac{d}{20} + \frac{d}{30} = d\left(\frac{3+2}{60}\right) = \frac{5d}{60} = \frac{d}{12}\)
\[\text{Average speed} = \frac{2d}{d/12} = 2d \times \frac{12}{d} = \boxed{24 \text{ km/h}}\]
Note: The average speed (24 km/h) is NOT the arithmetic mean (25 km/h). For equal distances at different speeds, the average speed is the harmonic mean: \(\frac{2v_1 v_2}{v_1 + v_2} = \frac{2 \times 20 \times 30}{50} = 24\) km/h.
2.4 Instantaneous Velocity and Speed
The average velocity gives us a broad picture over a time interval. But what about the velocity at a specific instant? The instantaneous velocity is defined as:
Graphically, the instantaneous velocity at any point on an \(x\)-\(t\) graph equals the slope of the tangent to the curve at that point.
The instantaneous speed is simply the magnitude of instantaneous velocity: speed = \(|v|\).
Reading an x-t Graph
| x-t Graph Feature | Motion Interpretation |
|---|---|
| Straight line with positive slope | Uniform velocity in positive direction |
| Straight line with negative slope | Uniform velocity in negative direction |
| Horizontal line (zero slope) | Object at rest |
| Curve bending upward (increasing slope) | Positive acceleration (speeding up) |
| Curve bending downward (decreasing slope) | Negative acceleration (slowing down) |
Worked Example 4: Finding Velocity from Position Function
The position of a particle is given by \(x(t) = 3t^2 + 5t + 2\) (in metres, with \(t\) in seconds). Find (a) the velocity at \(t = 2\) s, and (b) the average velocity between \(t = 1\) s and \(t = 3\) s.
(a) Instantaneous velocity = \(\frac{dx}{dt}\)
\[v = \frac{d}{dt}(3t^2 + 5t + 2) = 6t + 5\] At \(t = 2\) s: \[v = 6(2) + 5 = 12 + 5 = \boxed{17 \text{ m/s}}\]
(b) Average velocity between \(t = 1\) s and \(t = 3\) s:
\[x(1) = 3(1)^2 + 5(1) + 2 = 10 \text{ m}\] \[x(3) = 3(9) + 5(3) + 2 = 27 + 15 + 2 = 44 \text{ m}\] \[\bar{v} = \frac{x(3) - x(1)}{3 - 1} = \frac{44 - 10}{2} = \boxed{17 \text{ m/s}}\]
Interesting: Here, the average velocity equals the instantaneous velocity at the midpoint (\(t = 2\)). This happens because acceleration is uniform (constant \(a = 6\) m/s²).
- Stand at a marked starting point. Walk exactly 8 steps forward and mark your position A.
- Now walk exactly 3 steps backward and mark position B.
- Measure the distance from start to A (path 1), then A to B (path 2).
- Calculate: (a) Path length = distance of path 1 + distance of path 2. (b) Displacement = distance from start to B.
- Repeat with different step counts and tabulate.
Conclusion: Whenever an object reverses direction, path length exceeds the magnitude of displacement. They are equal only when motion is in one direction without any reversal.
Interactive: Position-Time Graph Explorer L3 Apply
Click anywhere on the graph area to place a point. The slope (velocity) between consecutive points is calculated automatically.
Competency-Based Questions
Q1. L1 Remember What is the SI unit of displacement?
Q2. L3 Apply Calculate the total path length and the net displacement of the delivery van. (3 marks)
Path length = 5 + 3 + 4 = 12 km
Position of C = 5 + 3 − 4 = +4 km (east of O)
Displacement = 4 − 0 = +4 km (east)
Q3. L3 Apply Find the average speed and average velocity of the van for the entire trip. (3 marks)
Total time = 30 min = 0.5 h
Average speed = 12/0.5 = 24 km/h
Average velocity = 4/0.5 = 8 km/h (east)
Note: average speed (24) > |average velocity| (8), as expected.
Q4. L4 Analyse The position of a particle varies as \(x = 4t - 2t^2\) (in metres). Determine the time at which the particle returns to the origin and the displacement during this time. (3 marks)
At origin, \(x = 0\):
\(4t - 2t^2 = 0 \Rightarrow 2t(2 - t) = 0\)
\(t = 0\) or \(t = 2\) s
The particle is at the origin at \(t = 0\) and returns at \(t = 2\) s.
Displacement from \(t = 0\) to \(t = 2\): \(\Delta x = x(2) - x(0) = 0 - 0 = \boxed{0}\)
The particle returns to the starting point, so net displacement is zero — but the path length is non-zero (the particle first moves forward, then reverses).
Q5. L5 Evaluate A student claims that since the speedometer of a car shows 60 km/h at every instant during a trip, the average speed must be 60 km/h. Is this correct? Can the average velocity also be 60 km/h? Justify. (3 marks)
The student is correct about average speed. If the instantaneous speed is constant at 60 km/h throughout the trip, then average speed = 60 km/h.
However, the average velocity equals 60 km/h only if the car moves in a single straight-line direction without turning. If the road curves or the car changes direction, the displacement will be less than the total path length, making |average velocity| < 60 km/h. For example, driving around a circular track at constant 60 km/h gives average speed = 60 km/h but average velocity = 0 after each complete lap.
Assertion-Reason Questions
Assertion (A): Displacement of an object can be zero even if the distance travelled is non-zero.
Reason (R): Displacement depends only on the initial and final positions, not on the path taken.
Assertion (A): Average speed of an object is always greater than or equal to the magnitude of its average velocity.
Reason (R): Path length is always greater than or equal to the magnitude of displacement.
Assertion (A): The instantaneous speed of an object is always equal to the magnitude of its instantaneous velocity.
Reason (R): Instantaneous velocity is defined as the derivative of position with respect to time.