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Wikipedia

Velocity

Velocity is the speed in combination with the direction of motion of an object. Velocity is a fundamental concept in kinematics, the branch of classical mechanics that describes the motion of bodies.

Velocity
As a change of direction occurs while the racing cars turn on the curved track, their velocity is not constant even if their speed is.
Common symbols
v, v, v, v
Other units
mph, ft/s
In SI base unitsm/s
DimensionL T−1

Velocity is a physical vector quantity: both magnitude and direction are needed to define it. The scalar absolute value (magnitude) of velocity is called speed, being a coherent derived unit whose quantity is measured in the SI (metric system) as metres per second (m/s or m⋅s−1). For example, "5 metres per second" is a scalar, whereas "5 metres per second east" is a vector. If there is a change in speed, direction or both, then the object is said to be undergoing an acceleration.

Definition

Average velocity

The average velocity of an object over a period of time is its change in position,  , divided by the duration of the period,  , given mathematically as[1]

 

Instantaneous velocity

 
Example of a velocity vs. time graph, and the relationship between velocity v on the y-axis, acceleration a (the three green tangent lines represent the values for acceleration at different points along the curve) and displacement s (the yellow area under the curve.)

The instantaneous velocity of an object is the limit average velocity as the time interval approaches zero. At any particular time t, it can be calculated as the derivative of the position with respect to time:[2]

 

From this derivative equation, in the one-dimensional case it can be seen that the area under a velocity vs. time (v vs. t graph) is the displacement, s. In calculus terms, the integral of the velocity function v(t) is the displacement function s(t). In the figure, this corresponds to the yellow area under the curve.

 

Although the concept of an instantaneous velocity might at first seem counter-intuitive, it may be thought of as the velocity that the object would continue to travel at if it stopped accelerating at that moment.

Difference between speed and velocity

 
Kinematic quantities of a classical particle: mass m, position r, velocity v, acceleration a.

While the terms speed and velocity are often colloquially used interchangeably to connote how fast an object is moving, in scientific terms they are different. Speed, the scalar magnitude of a velocity vector, denotes only how fast an object is moving, while velocity indicates both an object's speed and direction.[3][4][5]

To have a constant velocity, an object must have a constant speed in a constant direction. Constant direction constrains the object to motion in a straight path thus, a constant velocity means motion in a straight line at a constant speed.

For example, a car moving at a constant 20 kilometres per hour in a circular path has a constant speed, but does not have a constant velocity because its direction changes. Hence, the car is considered to be undergoing an acceleration.

Units

Since the derivative of the position with respect to time gives the change in position (in metres) divided by the change in time (in seconds), velocity is measured in metres per second (m/s).

Equation of motion

Average velocity

Velocity is defined as the rate of change of position with respect to time, which may also be referred to as the instantaneous velocity to emphasize the distinction from the average velocity. In some applications the average velocity of an object might be needed, that is to say, the constant velocity that would provide the same resultant displacement as a variable velocity in the same time interval, v(t), over some time period Δt. Average velocity can be calculated as:[6][7]

 

The average velocity is always less than or equal to the average speed of an object. This can be seen by realizing that while distance is always strictly increasing, displacement can increase or decrease in magnitude as well as change direction.

In terms of a displacement-time (x vs. t) graph, the instantaneous velocity (or, simply, velocity) can be thought of as the slope of the tangent line to the curve at any point, and the average velocity as the slope of the secant line between two points with t coordinates equal to the boundaries of the time period for the average velocity.

Special cases

  • When a particle moves with different uniform speeds v1, v2, v3, ..., vn in different time intervals t1, t2, t3, ..., tn respectively, then average speed over the total time of journey is given as
     

If t1 = t2 = t3 = ... = t, then average speed is given by the arithmetic mean of the speeds

 
  • When a particle moves different distances s1, s2, s3,..., sn with speeds v1, v2, v3,..., vn respectively, then the average speed of the particle over the total distance is given as[8]
 
If s1 = s2 = s3 = ... = s, then average speed is given by the harmonic mean of the speeds[8]
 

Relationship to acceleration

Although velocity is defined as the rate of change of position, it is often common to start with an expression for an object's acceleration. As seen by the three green tangent lines in the figure, an object's instantaneous acceleration at a point in time is the slope of the line tangent to the curve of a v(t) graph at that point. In other words, instantaneous acceleration is defined as the derivative of velocity with respect to time:[9]

 

From there, we can obtain an expression for velocity as the area under an a(t) acceleration vs. time graph. As above, this is done using the concept of the integral:

 

Constant acceleration

In the special case of constant acceleration, velocity can be studied using the suvat equations. By considering a as being equal to some arbitrary constant vector, it is trivial to show that

 
with v as the velocity at time t and u as the velocity at time t = 0. By combining this equation with the suvat equation x = ut + at2/2, it is possible to relate the displacement and the average velocity by
 
It is also possible to derive an expression for the velocity independent of time, known as the Torricelli equation, as follows:
 
 
 
where v = |v| etc.

The above equations are valid for both Newtonian mechanics and special relativity. Where Newtonian mechanics and special relativity differ is in how different observers would describe the same situation. In particular, in Newtonian mechanics, all observers agree on the value of t and the transformation rules for position create a situation in which all non-accelerating observers would describe the acceleration of an object with the same values. Neither is true for special relativity. In other words, only relative velocity can be calculated.

Quantities that are dependent on velocity

Momentum

In classical mechanics, Newton's second law defines momentum, p, as a vector that is the product of an object's mass and velocity, given mathematically as

 
where m is the mass of the object.

Kinetic energy

The kinetic energy of a moving object is dependent on its velocity and is given by the equation[10]

 
where Ek is the kinetic energy. Kinetic energy is a scalar quantity as it depends on the square of the velocity.

Drag (fluid resistance)

In fluid dynamics, drag is a force acting opposite to the relative motion of any object moving with respect to a surrounding fluid. The drag force,  , is dependent on the square of velocity and is given as

 
where

Escape velocity

Escape velocity is the minimum speed a ballistic object needs to escape from a massive body such as Earth. It represents the kinetic energy that, when added to the object's gravitational potential energy (which is always negative), is equal to zero. The general formula for the escape velocity of an object at a distance r from the center of a planet with mass M is[12]

 
where G is the gravitational constant and g is the gravitational acceleration. The escape velocity from Earth's surface is about 11 200 m/s, and is irrespective of the direction of the object. This makes "escape velocity" somewhat of a misnomer, as the more correct term would be "escape speed": any object attaining a velocity of that magnitude, irrespective of atmosphere, will leave the vicinity of the base body as long as it does not intersect with something in its path.

The Lorentz factor of special relativity

In special relativity, the dimensionless Lorentz factor appears frequently, and is given by[13]

 
where γ is the Lorentz factor and c is the speed of light.

Relative velocity

Relative velocity is a measurement of velocity between two objects as determined in a single coordinate system. Relative velocity is fundamental in both classical and modern physics, since many systems in physics deal with the relative motion of two or more particles.

Consider an object A moving with velocity vector v and an object B with velocity vector w; these absolute velocities are typically expressed in the same inertial reference frame. Then, the velocity of object A relative to object B is defined as the difference of the two velocity vectors:

 
Similarly, the relative velocity of object B moving with velocity w, relative to object A moving with velocity v is:
 
Usually, the inertial frame chosen is that in which the latter of the two mentioned objects is in rest.

In Newtonian mechanics, the relative velocity is independent of the chosen inertial reference frame. This is not the case anymore with special relativity in which velocities depend on the choice of reference frame.

Scalar velocities

In the one-dimensional case,[14] the velocities are scalars and the equation is either:

 
if the two objects are moving in opposite directions, or:
 
if the two objects are moving in the same direction.

Coordinate systems

Cartesian coordinates

In multi-dimensional Cartesian coordinate systems, velocity is broken up into components that correspond with each dimensional axis of the coordinate system. In a two-dimensional system, where there is an x-axis and a y-axis, corresponding velocity components are defined as[15]

 
 

The two-dimensional velocity vector is then defined as  . The magnitude of this vector represents speed and is found by the distance formula as

 

In three-dimensional systems where there is an additional z-axis, the corresponding velocity component is defined as

 

The three-dimensional velocity vector is defined as   with its magnitude also representing speed and being determined by

 

While some textbooks use subscript notation to define Cartesian components of velocity, others use  ,  , and   for the  -,  -, and  -axes respectively.[16]

Polar coordinates

 
Representation of radial and tangential components of velocity at different moments of linear motion with constant velocity of the object around an observer O (it corresponds, for example, to the passage of a car on a straight street around a pedestrian standing on the sidewalk). The radial component can be observed due to the Doppler effect, the tangential component causes visible changes of the position of the object.

In polar coordinates, a two-dimensional velocity is described by a radial velocity, defined as the component of velocity away from or toward the origin, and a transverse velocity, perpendicular to the radial one.[17][18] Both arise from angular velocity, which is the rate of rotation about the origin (with positive quantities representing counter-clockwise rotation and negative quantities representing clockwise rotation, in a right-handed coordinate system).

The radial and traverse velocities can be derived from the Cartesian velocity and displacement vectors by decomposing the velocity vector into radial and transverse components. The transverse velocity is the component of velocity along a circle centered at the origin.

 
where
  •   is the transverse velocity
  •   is the radial velocity.

The radial speed (or magnitude of the radial velocity) is the dot product of the velocity vector and the unit vector in the radial direction.

 
where   is position and   is the radial direction.

The transverse speed (or magnitude of the transverse velocity) is the magnitude of the cross product of the unit vector in the radial direction and the velocity vector. It is also the dot product of velocity and transverse direction, or the product of the angular speed   and the radius (the magnitude of the position).

 
such that
 

Angular momentum in scalar form is the mass times the distance to the origin times the transverse velocity, or equivalently, the mass times the distance squared times the angular speed. The sign convention for angular momentum is the same as that for angular velocity.

 
where
  •   is mass
  •  

The expression   is known as moment of inertia. If forces are in the radial direction only with an inverse square dependence, as in the case of a gravitational orbit, angular momentum is constant, and transverse speed is inversely proportional to the distance, angular speed is inversely proportional to the distance squared, and the rate at which area is swept out is constant. These relations are known as Kepler's laws of planetary motion.

See also

Notes

  • Robert Resnick and Jearl Walker, Fundamentals of Physics, Wiley; 7 Sub edition (June 16, 2004). ISBN 0-471-23231-9.

References

  1. ^ "The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol. I Ch. 8: Motion". www.feynmanlectures.caltech.edu. Retrieved 2024-01-05.
  2. ^ David Halliday; Robert Resnick; Jearl Walker (2021). Fundamentals of Physics, Extended (12th ed.). John Wiley & Sons. p. 71. ISBN 978-1-119-77351-1. Extract of page 71
  3. ^ Richard P. Olenick; Tom M. Apostol; David L. Goodstein (2008). The Mechanical Universe: Introduction to Mechanics and Heat (illustrated, reprinted ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 84. ISBN 978-0-521-71592-8. Extract of page 84
  4. ^ Michael J. Cardamone (2007). Fundamental Concepts of Physics. Universal-Publishers. p. 5. ISBN 978-1-59942-433-0. Extract of page 5
  5. ^ Jerry D. Wilson; Anthony J. Buffa; Bo Lou (2022). College Physics Essentials, Eighth Edition (Two-Volume Set) (illustrated ed.). CRC Press. p. 40. ISBN 978-1-351-12991-6. Extract of page 40
  6. ^ David Halliday; Robert Resnick; Jearl Walker (2021). Fundamentals of Physics, Extended (12th ed.). John Wiley & Sons. p. 70. ISBN 978-1-119-77351-1. Extract of page 70
  7. ^ Adrian Banner (2007). The Calculus Lifesaver: All the Tools You Need to Excel at Calculus (illustrated ed.). Princeton University Press. p. 350. ISBN 978-0-691-13088-0. Extract of page 350
  8. ^ a b Giri & Bannerjee (2002). Statistical Tools and Technique. Academic Publishers. p. 4. ISBN 978-81-87504-39-9. Extract of page 4
  9. ^ Bekir Karaoglu (2020). Classical Physics: A Two-Semester Coursebook. Springer Nature. p. 41. ISBN 978-3-030-38456-2. Extract of page 41
  10. ^ David Halliday; Robert Resnick; Jearl Walker (2010). Fundamentals of Physics, Chapters 33-37. John Wiley & Sons. p. 1080. ISBN 978-0-470-54794-6. Extract of page 1080
  11. ^ For Earth's atmosphere, the air density can be found using the barometric formula. It is 1.293 kg/m3 at 0 °C and 1 atmosphere.
  12. ^ Jim Breithaupt (2000). New Understanding Physics for Advanced Level (illustrated ed.). Nelson Thornes. p. 231. ISBN 978-0-7487-4314-8. Extract of page 231
  13. ^ Eckehard W Mielke (2022). Modern Aspects Of Relativity. World Scientific. p. 98. ISBN 978-981-12-4406-3. Extract of page 98
  14. ^ Basic principle
  15. ^ "The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol. I Ch. 9: Newton's Laws of Dynamics". www.feynmanlectures.caltech.edu. Retrieved 2024-01-04.
  16. ^ White, F. M. (2008). Fluid mechanics. The McGraw Hill Companies,.
  17. ^ E. Graham; Aidan Burrows; Brian Gaulter (2002). Mechanics, Volume 6 (illustrated ed.). Heinemann. p. 77. ISBN 978-0-435-51311-5. Extract of page 77
  18. ^ Anup Goel; H. J. Sawant (2021). Engineering Mechanics. Technical Publications. p. 8. ISBN 978-93-332-2190-0. Extract of page 8

External links

velocity, this, article, about, velocity, physics, other, uses, disambiguation, speed, combination, with, direction, motion, object, fundamental, concept, kinematics, branch, classical, mechanics, that, describes, motion, bodies, change, direction, occurs, whi. This article is about velocity in physics For other uses see Velocity disambiguation Velocity is the speed in combination with the direction of motion of an object Velocity is a fundamental concept in kinematics the branch of classical mechanics that describes the motion of bodies VelocityAs a change of direction occurs while the racing cars turn on the curved track their velocity is not constant even if their speed is Common symbolsv v v vOther unitsmph ft sIn SI base unitsm sDimensionL T 1Velocity is a physical vector quantity both magnitude and direction are needed to define it The scalar absolute value magnitude of velocity is called speed being a coherent derived unit whose quantity is measured in the SI metric system as metres per second m s or m s 1 For example 5 metres per second is a scalar whereas 5 metres per second east is a vector If there is a change in speed direction or both then the object is said to be undergoing an acceleration Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Average velocity 1 2 Instantaneous velocity 1 3 Difference between speed and velocity 1 4 Units 2 Equation of motion 2 1 Average velocity 2 1 1 Special cases 2 2 Relationship to acceleration 2 2 1 Constant acceleration 3 Quantities that are dependent on velocity 3 1 Momentum 3 2 Kinetic energy 3 3 Drag fluid resistance 3 4 Escape velocity 3 5 The Lorentz factor of special relativity 4 Relative velocity 4 1 Scalar velocities 5 Coordinate systems 5 1 Cartesian coordinates 5 2 Polar coordinates 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksDefinitionAverage velocity The average velocity of an object over a period of time is its change in position Ds displaystyle Delta s nbsp divided by the duration of the period Dt displaystyle Delta t nbsp given mathematically as 1 v DsDt displaystyle bar v frac Delta s Delta t nbsp Instantaneous velocity nbsp Example of a velocity vs time graph and the relationship between velocity v on the y axis acceleration a the three green tangent lines represent the values for acceleration at different points along the curve and displacement s the yellow area under the curve The instantaneous velocity of an object is the limit average velocity as the time interval approaches zero At any particular time t it can be calculated as the derivative of the position with respect to time 2 v limDt 0DsDt dsdt displaystyle boldsymbol v lim Delta t to 0 frac Delta boldsymbol s Delta t frac d boldsymbol s dt nbsp From this derivative equation in the one dimensional case it can be seen that the area under a velocity vs time v vs t graph is the displacement s In calculus terms the integral of the velocity function v t is the displacement function s t In the figure this corresponds to the yellow area under the curve s v dt displaystyle boldsymbol s int boldsymbol v dt nbsp Although the concept of an instantaneous velocity might at first seem counter intuitive it may be thought of as the velocity that the object would continue to travel at if it stopped accelerating at that moment Difference between speed and velocity Main article Speed nbsp Kinematic quantities of a classical particle mass m position r velocity v acceleration a While the terms speed and velocity are often colloquially used interchangeably to connote how fast an object is moving in scientific terms they are different Speed the scalar magnitude of a velocity vector denotes only how fast an object is moving while velocity indicates both an object s speed and direction 3 4 5 To have a constant velocity an object must have a constant speed in a constant direction Constant direction constrains the object to motion in a straight path thus a constant velocity means motion in a straight line at a constant speed For example a car moving at a constant 20 kilometres per hour in a circular path has a constant speed but does not have a constant velocity because its direction changes Hence the car is considered to be undergoing an acceleration Units Since the derivative of the position with respect to time gives the change in position in metres divided by the change in time in seconds velocity is measured in metres per second m s Equation of motionMain article Equation of motion Average velocity Velocity is defined as the rate of change of position with respect to time which may also be referred to as the instantaneous velocity to emphasize the distinction from the average velocity In some applications the average velocity of an object might be needed that is to say the constant velocity that would provide the same resultant displacement as a variable velocity in the same time interval v t over some time period Dt Average velocity can be calculated as 6 7 v DxDt t0t1v t dtt1 t0 displaystyle mathbf bar v frac Delta mathbf x Delta t frac int t 0 t 1 mathbf v t dt t 1 t 0 nbsp The average velocity is always less than or equal to the average speed of an object This can be seen by realizing that while distance is always strictly increasing displacement can increase or decrease in magnitude as well as change direction In terms of a displacement time x vs t graph the instantaneous velocity or simply velocity can be thought of as the slope of the tangent line to the curve at any point and the average velocity as the slope of the secant line between two points with t coordinates equal to the boundaries of the time period for the average velocity Special cases When a particle moves with different uniform speeds v1 v2 v3 vn in different time intervals t1 t2 t3 tn respectively then average speed over the total time of journey is given as v v1t1 v2t2 v3t3 vntnt1 t2 t3 tn displaystyle bar v v 1 t 1 v 2 t 2 v 3 t 3 dots v n t n over t 1 t 2 t 3 dots t n nbsp If t1 t2 t3 t then average speed is given by the arithmetic mean of the speedsv v1 v2 v3 vnn 1n i 1nvi displaystyle bar v v 1 v 2 v 3 dots v n over n frac 1 n sum i 1 n v i nbsp When a particle moves different distances s1 s2 s3 sn with speeds v1 v2 v3 vn respectively then the average speed of the particle over the total distance is given as 8 v s1 s2 s3 snt1 t2 t3 tn s1 s2 s3 sns1v1 s2v2 s3v3 snvn displaystyle bar v s 1 s 2 s 3 dots s n over t 1 t 2 t 3 dots t n s 1 s 2 s 3 dots s n over s 1 over v 1 s 2 over v 2 s 3 over v 3 dots s n over v n nbsp If s1 s2 s3 s then average speed is given by the harmonic mean of the speeds 8 v n 1v1 1v2 1v3 1vn 1 n i 1n1vi 1 displaystyle bar v n left 1 over v 1 1 over v 2 1 over v 3 dots 1 over v n right 1 n left sum i 1 n frac 1 v i right 1 nbsp Relationship to acceleration Although velocity is defined as the rate of change of position it is often common to start with an expression for an object s acceleration As seen by the three green tangent lines in the figure an object s instantaneous acceleration at a point in time is the slope of the line tangent to the curve of a v t graph at that point In other words instantaneous acceleration is defined as the derivative of velocity with respect to time 9 a dvdt displaystyle boldsymbol a frac d boldsymbol v dt nbsp From there we can obtain an expression for velocity as the area under an a t acceleration vs time graph As above this is done using the concept of the integral v a dt displaystyle boldsymbol v int boldsymbol a dt nbsp Constant acceleration In the special case of constant acceleration velocity can be studied using the suvat equations By considering a as being equal to some arbitrary constant vector it is trivial to show thatv u at displaystyle boldsymbol v boldsymbol u boldsymbol a t nbsp with v as the velocity at time t and u as the velocity at time t 0 By combining this equation with the suvat equation x ut at2 2 it is possible to relate the displacement and the average velocity by x u v 2t v t displaystyle boldsymbol x frac boldsymbol u boldsymbol v 2 t boldsymbol bar v t nbsp It is also possible to derive an expression for the velocity independent of time known as the Torricelli equation as follows v2 v v u at u at u2 2t a u a2t2 displaystyle v 2 boldsymbol v cdot boldsymbol v boldsymbol u boldsymbol a t cdot boldsymbol u boldsymbol a t u 2 2t boldsymbol a cdot boldsymbol u a 2 t 2 nbsp 2a x 2a ut 12at2 2t a u a2t2 v2 u2 displaystyle 2 boldsymbol a cdot boldsymbol x 2 boldsymbol a cdot boldsymbol u t tfrac 1 2 boldsymbol a t 2 2t boldsymbol a cdot boldsymbol u a 2 t 2 v 2 u 2 nbsp v2 u2 2 a x displaystyle therefore v 2 u 2 2 boldsymbol a cdot boldsymbol x nbsp where v v etc The above equations are valid for both Newtonian mechanics and special relativity Where Newtonian mechanics and special relativity differ is in how different observers would describe the same situation In particular in Newtonian mechanics all observers agree on the value of t and the transformation rules for position create a situation in which all non accelerating observers would describe the acceleration of an object with the same values Neither is true for special relativity In other words only relative velocity can be calculated Quantities that are dependent on velocityMomentum In classical mechanics Newton s second law defines momentum p as a vector that is the product of an object s mass and velocity given mathematically asp mv displaystyle boldsymbol p m boldsymbol v nbsp where m is the mass of the object Kinetic energy The kinetic energy of a moving object is dependent on its velocity and is given by the equation 10 Ek 12mv2 displaystyle E text k tfrac 1 2 mv 2 nbsp where Ek is the kinetic energy Kinetic energy is a scalar quantity as it depends on the square of the velocity Drag fluid resistance In fluid dynamics drag is a force acting opposite to the relative motion of any object moving with respect to a surrounding fluid The drag force FD displaystyle F D nbsp is dependent on the square of velocity and is given asFD 12rv2CDA displaystyle F D tfrac 1 2 rho v 2 C D A nbsp where r displaystyle rho nbsp is the density of the fluid 11 v displaystyle v nbsp is the speed of the object relative to the fluid A displaystyle A nbsp is the cross sectional area and CD displaystyle C D nbsp is the drag coefficient a dimensionless number Escape velocity Escape velocity is the minimum speed a ballistic object needs to escape from a massive body such as Earth It represents the kinetic energy that when added to the object s gravitational potential energy which is always negative is equal to zero The general formula for the escape velocity of an object at a distance r from the center of a planet with mass M is 12 ve 2GMr 2gr displaystyle v text e sqrt frac 2GM r sqrt 2gr nbsp where G is the gravitational constant and g is the gravitational acceleration The escape velocity from Earth s surface is about 11 200 m s and is irrespective of the direction of the object This makes escape velocity somewhat of a misnomer as the more correct term would be escape speed any object attaining a velocity of that magnitude irrespective of atmosphere will leave the vicinity of the base body as long as it does not intersect with something in its path The Lorentz factor of special relativity In special relativity the dimensionless Lorentz factor appears frequently and is given by 13 g 11 v2c2 displaystyle gamma frac 1 sqrt 1 frac v 2 c 2 nbsp where g is the Lorentz factor and c is the speed of light Relative velocityMain article Relative velocity Relative velocity is a measurement of velocity between two objects as determined in a single coordinate system Relative velocity is fundamental in both classical and modern physics since many systems in physics deal with the relative motion of two or more particles Consider an object A moving with velocity vector v and an object B with velocity vector w these absolute velocities are typically expressed in the same inertial reference frame Then the velocity of object A relative to object B is defined as the difference of the two velocity vectors vA relative to B v w displaystyle boldsymbol v A text relative to B boldsymbol v boldsymbol w nbsp Similarly the relative velocity of object B moving with velocity w relative to object A moving with velocity v is vB relative to A w v displaystyle boldsymbol v B text relative to A boldsymbol w boldsymbol v nbsp Usually the inertial frame chosen is that in which the latter of the two mentioned objects is in rest In Newtonian mechanics the relative velocity is independent of the chosen inertial reference frame This is not the case anymore with special relativity in which velocities depend on the choice of reference frame Scalar velocities In the one dimensional case 14 the velocities are scalars and the equation is either vrel v w displaystyle v text rel v w nbsp if the two objects are moving in opposite directions or vrel v w displaystyle v text rel v w nbsp if the two objects are moving in the same direction Coordinate systemsCartesian coordinates In multi dimensional Cartesian coordinate systems velocity is broken up into components that correspond with each dimensional axis of the coordinate system In a two dimensional system where there is an x axis and a y axis corresponding velocity components are defined as 15 vx dx dt displaystyle v x dx dt nbsp vy dy dt displaystyle v y dy dt nbsp The two dimensional velocity vector is then defined as v lt vx vy gt displaystyle textbf v lt v x v y gt nbsp The magnitude of this vector represents speed and is found by the distance formula as v vx2 vy2 displaystyle v sqrt v x 2 v y 2 nbsp In three dimensional systems where there is an additional z axis the corresponding velocity component is defined asvz dz dt displaystyle v z dz dt nbsp The three dimensional velocity vector is defined as v lt vx vy vz gt displaystyle textbf v lt v x v y v z gt nbsp with its magnitude also representing speed and being determined by v vx2 vy2 vz2 displaystyle v sqrt v x 2 v y 2 v z 2 nbsp While some textbooks use subscript notation to define Cartesian components of velocity others use u displaystyle u nbsp v displaystyle v nbsp and w displaystyle w nbsp for the x displaystyle x nbsp y displaystyle y nbsp and z displaystyle z nbsp axes respectively 16 Polar coordinates See also Circular motion In polar coordinates and Radial transverse normal nbsp Representation of radial and tangential components of velocity at different moments of linear motion with constant velocity of the object around an observer O it corresponds for example to the passage of a car on a straight street around a pedestrian standing on the sidewalk The radial component can be observed due to the Doppler effect the tangential component causes visible changes of the position of the object In polar coordinates a two dimensional velocity is described by a radial velocity defined as the component of velocity away from or toward the origin and a transverse velocity perpendicular to the radial one 17 18 Both arise from angular velocity which is the rate of rotation about the origin with positive quantities representing counter clockwise rotation and negative quantities representing clockwise rotation in a right handed coordinate system The radial and traverse velocities can be derived from the Cartesian velocity and displacement vectors by decomposing the velocity vector into radial and transverse components The transverse velocity is the component of velocity along a circle centered at the origin v vT vR displaystyle boldsymbol v boldsymbol v T boldsymbol v R nbsp where vT displaystyle boldsymbol v T nbsp is the transverse velocity vR displaystyle boldsymbol v R nbsp is the radial velocity The radial speed or magnitude of the radial velocity is the dot product of the velocity vector and the unit vector in the radial direction vR v r r v r displaystyle v R frac boldsymbol v cdot boldsymbol r left boldsymbol r right boldsymbol v cdot hat boldsymbol r nbsp where r displaystyle boldsymbol r nbsp is position and r displaystyle hat boldsymbol r nbsp is the radial direction The transverse speed or magnitude of the transverse velocity is the magnitude of the cross product of the unit vector in the radial direction and the velocity vector It is also the dot product of velocity and transverse direction or the product of the angular speed w displaystyle omega nbsp and the radius the magnitude of the position vT r v r v t w r displaystyle v T frac boldsymbol r times boldsymbol v boldsymbol r boldsymbol v cdot hat boldsymbol t omega boldsymbol r nbsp such that w r v r 2 displaystyle omega frac boldsymbol r times boldsymbol v boldsymbol r 2 nbsp Angular momentum in scalar form is the mass times the distance to the origin times the transverse velocity or equivalently the mass times the distance squared times the angular speed The sign convention for angular momentum is the same as that for angular velocity L mrvT mr2w displaystyle L mrv T mr 2 omega nbsp where m displaystyle m nbsp is mass r r displaystyle r boldsymbol r nbsp The expression mr2 displaystyle mr 2 nbsp is known as moment of inertia If forces are in the radial direction only with an inverse square dependence as in the case of a gravitational orbit angular momentum is constant and transverse speed is inversely proportional to the distance angular speed is inversely proportional to the distance squared and the rate at which area is swept out is constant These relations are known as Kepler s laws of planetary motion See alsoFour velocity relativistic version of velocity for Minkowski spacetime Group velocity Hypervelocity Phase velocity Proper velocity in relativity using traveler time instead of observer time Rapidity a version of velocity additive at relativistic speeds Terminal velocity Velocity field Velocity vs time graphNotesRobert Resnick and Jearl Walker Fundamentals of Physics Wiley 7 Sub edition June 16 2004 ISBN 0 471 23231 9 References The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol I Ch 8 Motion www feynmanlectures caltech edu Retrieved 2024 01 05 David Halliday Robert Resnick Jearl Walker 2021 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 12th ed John Wiley amp Sons p 71 ISBN 978 1 119 77351 1 Extract of page 71 Richard P Olenick Tom M Apostol David L Goodstein 2008 The Mechanical Universe Introduction to Mechanics and Heat illustrated reprinted ed Cambridge University Press p 84 ISBN 978 0 521 71592 8 Extract of page 84 Michael J Cardamone 2007 Fundamental Concepts of Physics Universal Publishers p 5 ISBN 978 1 59942 433 0 Extract of page 5 Jerry D Wilson Anthony J Buffa Bo Lou 2022 College Physics Essentials Eighth Edition Two Volume Set illustrated ed CRC Press p 40 ISBN 978 1 351 12991 6 Extract of page 40 David Halliday Robert Resnick Jearl Walker 2021 Fundamentals of Physics Extended 12th ed John Wiley amp Sons p 70 ISBN 978 1 119 77351 1 Extract of page 70 Adrian Banner 2007 The Calculus Lifesaver All the Tools You Need to Excel at Calculus illustrated ed Princeton University Press p 350 ISBN 978 0 691 13088 0 Extract of page 350 a b Giri amp Bannerjee 2002 Statistical Tools and Technique Academic Publishers p 4 ISBN 978 81 87504 39 9 Extract of page 4 Bekir Karaoglu 2020 Classical Physics A Two Semester Coursebook Springer Nature p 41 ISBN 978 3 030 38456 2 Extract of page 41 David Halliday Robert Resnick Jearl Walker 2010 Fundamentals of Physics Chapters 33 37 John Wiley amp Sons p 1080 ISBN 978 0 470 54794 6 Extract of page 1080 For Earth s atmosphere the air density can be found using the barometric formula It is 1 293 kg m3 at 0 C and 1 atmosphere Jim Breithaupt 2000 New Understanding Physics for Advanced Level illustrated ed Nelson Thornes p 231 ISBN 978 0 7487 4314 8 Extract of page 231 Eckehard W Mielke 2022 Modern Aspects Of Relativity World Scientific p 98 ISBN 978 981 12 4406 3 Extract of page 98 Basic principle The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol I Ch 9 Newton s Laws of Dynamics www feynmanlectures caltech edu Retrieved 2024 01 04 White F M 2008 Fluid mechanics The McGraw Hill Companies E Graham Aidan Burrows Brian Gaulter 2002 Mechanics Volume 6 illustrated ed Heinemann p 77 ISBN 978 0 435 51311 5 Extract of page 77 Anup Goel H J Sawant 2021 Engineering Mechanics Technical Publications p 8 ISBN 978 93 332 2190 0 Extract of page 8External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Velocity Velocity and Acceleration Introduction to Mechanisms Carnegie Mellon University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Velocity amp oldid 1218219126 Relative velocity, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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