A common use of vector-valued functions is to describe the motion of an object in the plane or in space. A position function gives the position of an object at time . This section explores how derivatives and integrals are used to study the motion described by such a function.
Let be a position function in or .
Velocity, denoted , is the instantaneous rate of position change; that is, .
Speed is the magnitude of velocity, .
Acceleration, denoted , is the instantaneous rate of velocity change; that is, .
Watch the video:
Example of Position, Velocity and Acceleration in Three Space from https://youtu.be/gD2R4Jqw6dQ
An object is moving with position function , , where distances are measured in feet and time is measured in seconds.
Find and .
Sketch ; plot , , and , each with their initial point at their corresponding point on the graph of .
When is the object’s speed minimized?
Solution
Taking derivatives, we find
Note that acceleration is constant.
, ; , . These are plotted with in Figure 12.3.1(a).
We can think of acceleration as “pulling” the velocity vector in a certain direction. At , the velocity vector points down and to the left; at , the velocity vector has been pulled in the direction and is now pointing up and to the right. In Figure 12.3.1(b) we plot more velocity/acceleration vectors, making more clear the effect acceleration has on velocity.
Since is constant in this example, as grows large becomes almost parallel to . For instance, when , , which is nearly parallel to .
The object’s speed is given by
To find the minimal speed, we could apply calculus techniques (such as set the derivative equal to 0 and solve for , etc.) but we can find it by inspection. Inside the square root we have a quadratic which is minimized when . Thus the speed is minimized at , with a speed of ft/s.
The graph in Figure 12.3.1(b) also implies speed is minimized here. The filled dots on the graph are located at integer values of between and 3. Dots that are far apart imply the object traveled a far distance in 1 second, indicating high speed; dots that are close together imply the object did not travel far in 1 second, indicating a low speed. The dots are closest together near , implying the speed is minimized near that value.
Two objects follow an identical path at different rates on . The position function for Object 1 is ; the position function for Object 2 is , where distances are measured in feet and time is measured in seconds. Compare the velocity, speed and acceleration of the two objects on the path.
SolutionWe begin by computing the velocity and acceleration function for each object:
We immediately see that Object 1 has constant acceleration, whereas Object 2 does not.
At , we have and ; the velocity of Object 2 is three times that of Object 1 and so it follows that the speed of Object 2 is three times that of Object 1 ( ft/s compared to ft/s.)
At , the velocity of Object 1 is and the velocity of Object 2 is . This tells us that Object 2 comes to a complete stop at .
In Figure 12.3.2, we see the velocity and acceleration vectors for Object 1 plotted for and . Note again how the constant acceleration vector seems to “pull” the velocity vector from pointing down, right to up, right. We could plot the analogous picture for Object 2, but the velocity and acceleration vectors are rather large ().
Instead, we simply plot the locations of Object 1 and 2 on intervals of of a second, shown in Figure 12.3.3(a) and (b). Note how the -values of Object 1 increase at a steady rate. This is because the -component of is 0; there is no acceleration in the -component. The dots are not evenly spaced; the object is moving faster near and than near . ††margin: (a) (b)
In part (b) of the Figure, we see the points plotted for Object 2. Note the large change in position from to ; the object starts moving very quickly. However, it slows considerably at it approaches the origin, and comes to a complete stop at . While it looks like there are 3 points near the origin, there are in reality 5 points there.
Since the objects begin and end at the same location, they have the same displacement. Since they begin and end at the same time, with the same displacement, they have the same average rate of change (i.e, they have the same average velocity). Since they follow the same path, they have the same distance traveled. Even though these three measurements are the same, the objects obviously travel the path in very different ways.
A young boy whirls a ball, attached to a string, above his head in a counter-clockwise circle. The ball follows a circular path and makes 2 revolutions per second. The string has length 2ft.
Find the position function that describes this situation.
Find the acceleration of the ball and give a physical interpretation of it.
A tree stands 10ft in front of the boy. At what -values should the boy release the string so that the ball hits the tree?
Solution
The ball whirls in a circle. Since the string is 2ft long, the radius of the circle is 2. The position function describes a circle with radius 2, centered at the origin, but makes a full revolution every seconds, not two revolutions per second. We modify the period of the trigonometric functions to be 1/2 by multiplying by . The final position function is thus
(Plot this for to verify that one revolution is made in 1/2 a second.)
To find , we differentiate twice.
Note how is parallel to , but has a different magnitude and points in the opposite direction. Why is this?
Recall the classic physics equation, “Force mass acceleration.” A force acting on a mass induces acceleration (i.e., the mass moves); acceleration acting on a mass induces a force (gravity gives our mass a weight). Thus force and acceleration are closely related. A moving ball “wants” to travel in a straight line. Why does the ball in our example move in a circle? It is attached to the boy’s hand by a string. The string applies a force to the ball, affecting it’s motion: the string accelerates the ball. This is not acceleration in the sense of “it travels faster;” rather, this acceleration is changing the velocity of the ball. In what direction is this force/acceleration being applied? In the direction of the string, towards the boy’s hand.
The magnitude of the acceleration is related to the speed at which the ball is traveling. A ball whirling quickly is rapidly changing direction/velocity. When velocity is changing rapidly, the acceleration must be “large.”
When the boy releases the string, the string no longer applies a force to the ball, meaning acceleration is and the ball can now move in a straight line in the direction of .
Let be the time when the boy lets go of the string. The ball will be at , traveling in the direction of . We want to find so that this line contains the point (since the tree is 10ft directly in front of the boy).
There are many ways to find this time value. We choose one that is relatively simple computationally. As shown in Figure 12.3.4, the vector from the release point to the tree is . This line segment is tangent to the circle, which means it is also perpendicular to itself, so their dot product is 0.
where is an integer. This means that every 1/2 second after s the boy can release the string (since the ball makes 2 revolutions per second, he has two chances each second to release the ball).
An object moves in a spiral with position function , where distances are measured in meters and time is in minutes. Describe the object’s speed and acceleration at time .
SolutionWith , we have:
The speed of the object is m/min; it moves at a constant speed. Note that the object does not accelerate in the -direction, but rather moves up at a constant rate of 1m/min.
The objects in Examples 12.3.3 and 12.3.4 traveled at a constant speed. That is, for some constant . Recall Theorem 12.2.5, which states that if a vector-valued function has constant length, then is perpendicular to its derivative: . In these examples, the velocity function has constant length, therefore we can conclude that the velocity is perpendicular to the acceleration: . A quick check verifies this.
There is an intuitive understanding of this. If acceleration is parallel to velocity, then it is only affecting the object’s speed; it does not change the direction of travel. (For example, consider a dropped stone. Acceleration and velocity are parallel — straight down — and the direction of velocity never changes, though speed does increase.) If acceleration is not perpendicular to velocity, then there is some acceleration in the direction of travel, influencing the speed. If speed is constant, then acceleration must be orthogonal to velocity, as it then only affects direction, and not speed.
If an object moves with constant speed, then its velocity and acceleration vectors are orthogonal. That is, .
An important application of vector-valued position functions is projectile motion: the motion of objects under only the influence of gravity. We will measure time in seconds, and distances will either be in meters or feet. We will show that we can completely describe the path of such an object knowing its initial position and initial velocity (i.e., where it is and where it is going.)
Suppose an object has initial position and initial velocity . It is customary to rewrite in terms of its speed and direction , where is a unit vector. Recall all unit vectors in can be written as , where is an angle measure counter-clockwise from the -axis. (We refer to as the angle of elevation.) Thus
Since the acceleration of the object is known, namely , where is the gravitational constant, we can find knowing our two initial conditions. We first find : ††margin: Note: In this text we use ft/s when using Imperial units, and m/s when using SI units.
Knowing , we have and so
We integrate once more to find :
Knowing , we conclude and
(12.1) |
We demonstrate how to use this position function in the next two examples.
Sydney shoots her Red Ryder® bb gun across level ground from an elevation of 4ft, where the barrel of the gun makes a angle with the horizontal. Find how far the bb travels before landing, assuming the bb is fired at the advertised rate of 350ft/s and ignoring air resistance.
SolutionA direct application of Equation (12.1) gives
where we set her initial position to be . We need to find when the bb lands, then we can find where. We accomplish this by setting the -component equal to 0 and solving for :
(We discarded a negative solution that resulted from our quadratic equation.)
We have found that the bb lands 2.03s after firing; with , we find the -component of our position function is ft. The bb lands about 704 feet away.
Alex holds his sister’s bb gun at a height of 3ft and wants to shoot a target that is 6ft above the ground, 25ft away. At what angle should he hold the gun to hit his target? (We still assume the muzzle velocity is 350ft/s.)
SolutionThe position function for the path of Alex’s bb is
We need to find so that for some value of . That is, we want to find and such that
This is not trivial (though not “hard”). We start by solving each equation for and , respectively.
Using the Pythagorean Identity , we have
Multiply both sides by :
This is a quadratic in . That is, we can apply the quadratic formula to find , then solve for itself.
Clearly the negative values do not fit our context, so we have and . Using , we can solve for :
Alex has two choices of angle. He can hold the rifle at an angle of about with the horizontal and hit his target s after firing, or he can hold his rifle almost straight up, with an angle of , where he’ll hit his target about 22s later. The first option is clearly the option he should choose.
Consider a driver who sets her cruise-control to 60mph, and travels at this speed for an hour. We can ask:
How far did the driver travel?
How far from her starting position is the driver?
The first is easy to answer: she traveled 60 miles. The second is impossible to answer with the given information. We do not know if she traveled in a straight line, on an oval racetrack, or along a slowly-winding highway.
This highlights an important fact: to compute distance traveled, we need only to know the speed, given by .
Let be a velocity function for a moving object. The distance traveled by the object on is:
Note that this is just a restatement of Theorem 12.2.6: arc length is the same as distance traveled, just viewed in a different context.
A particle moves in space with position function on , where is measured in seconds and distances are in meters. Find:
The distance traveled by the particle on .
The displacement of the particle on .
The particle’s average speed.
Solution
We use Theorem 12.3.1 to establish the integral: ††margin:
distance traveled | |||
This cannot be solved in terms of elementary functions so we turn to numerical integration, finding the distance to be 12.88 m.
The displacement is the vector
That is, the particle ends with an -value increased by 4 and with - and -values the same (see Figure 12.3.5).
We found above that the particle traveled 12.88 m over 4 seconds. We can compute average speed by dividing: 12.88/4 = 3.22 m/s.
We should also consider Definition 5.4.1 of Section 5.4, which says that the average value of a function on is . In our context, the average value of the speed is
Note how the physical context of a particle traveling gives meaning to a more abstract concept learned earlier.
In Definition 5.4.1 of Chapter 5 we defined the average value of a function on to be
Note how in Example 12.3.7 we computed the average speed as
that is, we just found the average value of on .
Likewise, given position function , the average velocity on is
that is, it is the average value of , or , on .
Let be a continuous position function on an open interval containing .
The average speed is:
The average velocity is:
The next two sections investigate more properties of the graphs of vector-valued functions and we’ll apply these new ideas to what we just learned about motion.
How is velocity different from speed?
What is the difference between displacement and distance traveled?
What is the difference between average velocity and average speed?
Distance traveled is the same as , just viewed in a different context.
Describe a scenario where an object’s average speed is a large number, but the magnitude of the average velocity is not a large number.
Explain why it is not possible to have an average velocity with a large magnitude but a small average speed.
In Exercises 7–10, a position function is given. Find and .
In Exercises 11–14, a position function is given. Sketch on the indicated interval. Find and , then add and to your sketch, with their initial points at , for the given value of .
on ;
on ;
on ;
on ;
In Exercises 15–24, a position function of an object is given. Find the speed of the object in terms of , and find where the speed is minimized/maximized on the indicated interval.
on
on
on
on
on
on
on
on
on
Projectile Motion: on
In Exercises 25–28, position functions and for two objects are given that follow the same path on the respective intervals.
Show that the positions are the same at the indicated and values; i.e., show
Find the velocity, speed and acceleration of the two objects at and , respectively.
In Exercises 29–32, find the position function of an object given its acceleration and initial velocity and position.
; ,
; ,
; ,
; ,
In Exercises 33–36, find the displacement, distance traveled, average velocity and average speed of the described object on the given interval.
An object with position function , where distances are measured in feet and time is in seconds, on .
An object with position function , where distances are measured in feet and time is in seconds, on .
An object with velocity function , where distances are measured in feet and time is in seconds, on .
An object with velocity function , where distances are measured in feet and time is in seconds, on .
Exercises 37–42 ask you to solve a variety of problems based on the principles of projectile motion.
A boy whirls a ball, attached to a 3ft string, above his head in a counter-clockwise circle. The ball makes 2 revolutions per second.
At what -values should the boy release the string so that the ball heads directly for a tree standing 10ft in front of him?
A Cessna flies at 1000ft at 150mph and drops a box of supplies to the professor (and his wife) on an island. Ignoring wind resistance, how far horizontally will the supplies travel before they land?