Speed and Velocity
by Matt Schoonover
Speed and Velocity
Speed and velocity are used fairly interchangeably in casual conversation, but when it comes to physics the two can mean vastly different things. Velocity has direction and therefor a vector quantity. Speed is the scalar form of velocity and therefor has no direction.
The most basic equation for velocity is
From this comes the average velocity equation of
A Mathematical Model
In order to find the velocity of an object one must find the change in distance over the change in time. In order to find the speed of an object one must find the magnitude of the velocity. Both are measured in meters per second.
A Computational Model
To help demonstrate the difference between the two, I wrote some simple code to model the motion of a ball moving on a track.
In the first picture, the velocity is only in one direction, so the speed and velocity are the same.
However, in the second picture, the velocity is in the x and y direction, so the speed and velocity are not the same.
Unit Vectors
Simple Examples
1. If a person walked a distance of 10 meters in 5 seconds, what is their average velocity?
Solution: Using the average velocity equation will tell you that the answer is 2 m/s.
2. If someone traveled with a velocity of 13 m/s for 3 minutes, how far would they have traveled?
Solution: First convert 3 minutes to seconds(180). Then use the velocity equation to solve for distance. You should get 2,340 m.
Connectedness
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- How is it connected to your major?
- Is there an interesting industrial application?
See also
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Further reading
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External links
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References
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