This MCQ module is based on: Free Fall Relative Velocity
Free Fall Relative Velocity
This assessment will be based on: Free Fall Relative Velocity
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Free Fall Relative Velocity
Free Fall Under Gravity
Free fall is a special case of uniformly accelerated motion where the only acceleration is due to gravity. Near Earth's surface:
Galileo's landmark insight was that all objects, regardless of their mass, fall with the same acceleration when air resistance is negligible. A heavy stone and a light coin dropped from the same height reach the ground at the same time (in vacuum).
Sign Convention for Free Fall
• Object dropped from rest: \(u = 0\), \(a = -g = -9.8\) m/s²
• Object thrown upward: \(u = +u_0\), \(a = -g\) (decelerates going up, accelerates coming down)
• Object thrown downward: \(u = -u_0\), \(a = -g\)
Worked Example 1 (NCERT Example 2.4): Ball Dropped from Tower
A ball is dropped from the top of a 20 m tower. Find (a) the time to reach the ground, and (b) the velocity just before hitting the ground. (Take \(g = 10\) m/s²)
Taking downward as positive: \(u = 0\), \(a = g = 10\) m/s², \(s = 20\) m
(a) Time to reach ground: \[s = ut + \frac{1}{2}gt^2 \Rightarrow 20 = 0 + \frac{1}{2}(10)t^2\] \[20 = 5t^2 \Rightarrow t^2 = 4 \Rightarrow \boxed{t = 2 \text{ s}}\]
(b) Velocity at impact: \[v = u + gt = 0 + 10 \times 2 = \boxed{20 \text{ m/s}}\] Verification: \(v^2 = u^2 + 2gs = 0 + 2(10)(20) = 400 \Rightarrow v = 20\) m/s. Confirmed.
Worked Example 2 (NCERT Example 2.5): Ball Thrown Upward
A ball is thrown vertically upward with a velocity of 25 m/s. Find (a) the maximum height, (b) the total time in the air, and (c) the velocity when it returns to the thrower's hand. (\(g = 10\) m/s²)
Taking upward as positive: \(u = +25\) m/s, \(a = -10\) m/s²
(a) Maximum height (at max height, \(v = 0\)): \[v^2 = u^2 + 2as \Rightarrow 0 = 625 + 2(-10)h\] \[20h = 625 \Rightarrow \boxed{h = 31.25 \text{ m}}\]
(b) Time to reach max height: \[v = u + at \Rightarrow 0 = 25 - 10t \Rightarrow t_{\text{up}} = 2.5 \text{ s}\] By symmetry of free fall, time to come down = time to go up. \[\boxed{t_{\text{total}} = 2 \times 2.5 = 5 \text{ s}}\]
(c) Velocity on return:
Using \(v = u + at\) with \(t = 5\) s: \[v = 25 + (-10)(5) = 25 - 50 = \boxed{-25 \text{ m/s}}\] The negative sign indicates the velocity is directed downward. The speed is the same as the initial speed (25 m/s) — energy is conserved.
Stopping Distance
When a vehicle brakes, it decelerates from speed \(u\) to rest (\(v = 0\)). The stopping distance is:
This follows from \(v^2 = u^2 + 2as\) with \(v = 0\): \(0 = u^2 - 2|a|d\), giving \(d = u^2/(2|a|)\).
Worked Example 3 (NCERT Example 2.6): Stopping Distances at Various Speeds
A car can decelerate at 10 m/s². Calculate the stopping distance when travelling at (a) 10 m/s, (b) 20 m/s, (c) 50 m/s.
Using \(d = \frac{u^2}{2|a|}\) with \(|a| = 10\) m/s²:
(a) \(d = \frac{10^2}{20} = \frac{100}{20} = \boxed{5 \text{ m}}\)
(b) \(d = \frac{20^2}{20} = \frac{400}{20} = \boxed{20 \text{ m}}\)
(c) \(d = \frac{50^2}{20} = \frac{2500}{20} = \boxed{125 \text{ m}}\)
Pattern: 5 m, 20 m, 125 m. When speed doubles (10→20), distance quadruples (5→20). When speed is 5 times (10→50), distance is 25 times (5→125).
Reaction Time
Reaction time is the delay between perceiving a signal and responding to it. During this time, the vehicle continues at its original speed. The total stopping distance thus has two parts:
Worked Example 4 (NCERT Example 2.7): Measuring Reaction Time
A ruler is held vertically and dropped. A person catches it after it falls 21.0 cm. Calculate their reaction time. (\(g = 9.8\) m/s²)
The ruler falls freely from rest: \(u = 0\), \(s = 0.21\) m, \(a = g = 9.8\) m/s²
\[s = \frac{1}{2}gt_r^2 \Rightarrow 0.21 = \frac{1}{2}(9.8)t_r^2\] \[t_r^2 = \frac{0.42}{9.8} = 0.04286\] \[\boxed{t_r = \sqrt{0.04286} \approx 0.207 \text{ s}}\] This is within the typical range of human reaction times (0.15 to 0.3 s).
2.7 Relative Velocity
The velocity of an object is always measured relative to some reference frame. The relative velocity of object A with respect to object B is:
Two Objects Moving in the Same Direction
If A moves at \(v_A\) and B at \(v_B\) in the same direction, A appears to move at \(v_A - v_B\) relative to B. If \(v_A > v_B\), A moves forward relative to B.
Two Objects Moving in Opposite Directions
If A moves at \(v_A\) (positive direction) and B at \(v_B\) (negative direction), then \(v_B = -|v_B|\):
They approach each other with a relative speed equal to the sum of their individual speeds.
Worked Example 5: Two Trains Approaching
Two trains are 200 km apart on the same track, heading towards each other. Train A travels at 60 km/h and Train B at 40 km/h. How long before they meet?
Since the trains move toward each other, the relative speed is: \[v_{\text{rel}} = 60 + 40 = 100 \text{ km/h}\] Time to close a 200 km gap: \[t = \frac{\text{distance}}{v_{\text{rel}}} = \frac{200}{100} = \boxed{2 \text{ hours}}\] Verification: In 2 hours, A covers \(60 \times 2 = 120\) km and B covers \(40 \times 2 = 80\) km. Total = 200 km. Confirmed.
Worked Example 6: Overtaking Problem
A car travelling at 90 km/h wants to overtake a truck 20 m ahead moving at 72 km/h. How long does it take the car to reach the truck?
Converting to m/s: car speed = \(90 \times \frac{5}{18} = 25\) m/s, truck speed = \(72 \times \frac{5}{18} = 20\) m/s
Relative velocity of car w.r.t. truck = \(25 - 20 = 5\) m/s
Time to cover 20 m gap: \[t = \frac{20}{5} = \boxed{4 \text{ s}}\]
- Have a partner hold a 30 cm ruler vertically with the 0 cm mark at the bottom, aligned with the top of your open thumb and index finger.
- Without warning, your partner drops the ruler. Catch it as quickly as possible.
- Record the distance \(d\) (in metres) at which you caught it.
- Calculate reaction time: \(t_r = \sqrt{\frac{2d}{g}}\) with \(g = 9.8\) m/s².
- Repeat 5 times and find the average. Try with each hand.
If \(d = 15\) cm = 0.15 m: \(t_r = \sqrt{0.30/9.8} = \sqrt{0.0306} \approx 0.175\) s
If \(d = 25\) cm = 0.25 m: \(t_r = \sqrt{0.50/9.8} = \sqrt{0.051} \approx 0.226\) s
Most people have reaction times between 0.15 s and 0.3 s. The dominant hand is usually slightly faster. Fatigue and distractions increase reaction time — which is why using a phone while driving is so dangerous.
Interactive: Free Fall Simulator L3 Apply
Set the drop height and watch the ball fall. Time and velocity are calculated in real-time.
Competency-Based Questions
Q1. L1 Remember What is the formula for stopping distance in terms of initial speed \(u\) and deceleration \(a\)?
Q2. L3 Apply Calculate the total stopping distance (reaction + braking) for a car at 72 km/h. (3 marks)
\(u = 72 \text{ km/h} = 20\) m/s
Reaction distance = \(u \times t_r = 20 \times 0.6 = 12\) m
Braking distance = \(u^2/(2 \times 8) = 400/16 = 25\) m
Total = \(12 + 25 = \boxed{37 \text{ m}}\)
Q3. L4 Analyse A stone is dropped from a cliff. It covers 35% of its total fall distance in the last second. Find the total height of the cliff. (\(g = 10\) m/s²) (4 marks)
Let total time of fall = \(T\) seconds. Total height \(H = \frac{1}{2}gT^2 = 5T^2\).
Distance in last second = distance in \(T\) seconds minus distance in \((T-1)\) seconds:
\[d_{\text{last}} = 5T^2 - 5(T-1)^2 = 5[T^2 - T^2 + 2T - 1] = 5(2T-1)\] Given: \(d_{\text{last}} = 0.35H = 0.35 \times 5T^2 = 1.75T^2\)
\[5(2T-1) = 1.75T^2\] \[10T - 5 = 1.75T^2\] \[1.75T^2 - 10T + 5 = 0 \Rightarrow 7T^2 - 40T + 20 = 0\] \[T = \frac{40 \pm \sqrt{1600 - 560}}{14} = \frac{40 \pm \sqrt{1040}}{14} = \frac{40 \pm 32.25}{14}\] \(T = 5.16\) s or \(T = 0.554\) s. Since the last second condition requires \(T > 1\), we take \(T \approx 5.16\) s.
\[H = 5(5.16)^2 \approx \boxed{133 \text{ m}}\]
Q4. L3 Apply Two buses start from towns 300 km apart. Bus P travels at 40 km/h and Bus Q at 60 km/h, both heading toward each other. After how long do they meet, and how far from P's starting point? (3 marks)
Relative speed = 40 + 60 = 100 km/h (approaching each other).
Time to meet = 300/100 = 3 hours.
Distance from P's start = \(40 \times 3 = \boxed{120 \text{ km}}\)
Q5. L5 Evaluate Rain falls vertically at 10 m/s. A person walks at 5 m/s. At what angle should they hold an umbrella to stay dry? Would running faster change this angle? (3 marks)
Relative to the person, rain has a horizontal component of 5 m/s (backward) and vertical component of 10 m/s (downward).
Angle with vertical: \(\theta = \tan^{-1}\left(\frac{5}{10}\right) = \tan^{-1}(0.5) \approx \boxed{26.6°}\)
The umbrella should be tilted 26.6° from vertical in the direction of walking.
If they run faster (say 10 m/s): \(\theta = \tan^{-1}(10/10) = 45°\). Running faster increases the angle. The faster you move, the more tilted the umbrella must be. At very high speeds, the rain would appear almost horizontal.
Assertion-Reason Questions
Assertion (A): A ball thrown upward has zero velocity but non-zero acceleration at its highest point.
Reason (R): The acceleration due to gravity acts downward at all times during the flight, regardless of the direction of velocity.
Assertion (A): The stopping distance of a car doubles when its speed doubles.
Reason (R): Stopping distance is proportional to the square of the initial speed.
Assertion (A): When two cars move in the same direction, the relative velocity equals the sum of their speeds.
Reason (R): Relative velocity of A with respect to B is \(v_{AB} = v_A - v_B\).