Chapter 9:
Motion and Time
Learn about speed, types of motion, simple pendulum, time period, distance-time graphs, uniform and non-uniform motion explained with more than 100 practice questions.
Quick Revision: Motion and Time
- Speed: Distance covered per unit time. Formula: Speed = Distance / Time. SI unit: m/s.
- Types of Motion: Rectilinear (straight line), Circular (along a circle), Periodic (repeats after fixed interval, e.g., pendulum).
- Uniform Motion: Constant speed β equal distances in equal time intervals. Distance-time graph is a straight line.
- Non-uniform Motion: Changing speed β distance-time graph is curved.
- Simple Pendulum: Bob + string. Time period = time for one oscillation. T = total time / number of oscillations.
- Time Period of Pendulum: Depends on length (longer length β longer period). Constant for given length (Galileo's discovery).
- Units of Time: 1 day = 24 hours, 1 hour = 60 minutes, 1 minute = 60 seconds. Microsecond = 10β»βΆ s, nanosecond = 10β»βΉ s.
- Speedometer: Measures instantaneous speed (km/h). Odometer: Measures total distance travelled (km).
- Distance-Time Graph: Slope = speed. Horizontal line = at rest. Straight line = constant speed. Steeper slope = higher speed.
- Average Speed: Total distance travelled divided by total time taken.
- Conversion: km/h to m/s: multiply by 5/18. m/s to km/h: multiply by 18/5.
Chapter Summary:
Motion and Time introduces the fundamental concepts of measuring and comparing motion. Speed is defined as distance covered per unit time (SI unit: m/s). Objects can move in different ways: rectilinear (straight line), circular, or periodic (repeating motion like a pendulum). Uniform motion means constant speed, shown as a straight line on a distance-time graph; non-uniform motion shows changing speed as a curved line.
Time measurement uses periodic events. The simple pendulum is a classic example: its time period (time for one oscillation) is constant for a given length. Galileo discovered this property, leading to pendulum clocks. Modern quartz clocks are more accurate. Time units range from nanoseconds (10β»βΉ s) to billions of years for astronomical events.
Speed is calculated as distance/time. Instruments like speedometers (instantaneous speed) and odometers (total distance) help measure motion. Distance-time graphs provide visual insights into motion: slope indicates speed, horizontal lines indicate rest, steeper lines indicate faster motion. Understanding these concepts helps analyze everyday motion, from walking to rocket launches.
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