9 INSTANTANEOUS VELOCITY AND RELATED RATES ONE OF THE most important applications of calculus is to motion in a straight line, which is called rectilinear motion. Consider a point P moving in a straight line. Let s be the distance (or space) measured from a fixed point O to any position of P, and let t be the time elapsed. Then to each value of t there will correspond a distance s. s will be a function of t: s = f(t). When we know f(t), we have what is called the equation of motion. Now, in a time interval Δt, there will be a change Δs -- P will move to the point P'. By definition,
For example, if at t = 30 sec, s = 100 meters, and at t = 35 sec, s = 210 m, then
But that is the average velocity in moving between those two points. The question calculus asks is: What is the exact velocity at the point P itself? If P moves with constant velocity -- which is called uniform motion -- then we don't need calculus for that. In other words, if the equation of motion is s = 22 t, then at every instant of time, the velocity is 22 m/sec. For, the slope of that line, which is 22, is rate of change of s with respect to t, which by definition is the velocity. In each 1 second of time, the point P moves a distance of 22 meters.
That is not a realistic pitcture, of course, because at 0 seconds the velocity is surely not 22 meters/sec to that constant velocity. During that acceleraltion, the velocity was not uniform. The graph was not a straight line. For any kind of motion, then, uniform or not, we define the instantaneous velocity at the time t to be the limit of the average velocity, Δs/Δt, as Δt approaches 0.
"The velocity at any instant t Compare Lesson 5. Example. Let the following be the equation of motion: s(t) = 6t ² + t + 8 Let t be measured in seconds and s in meters. a) What is the position -- the distance from the origin -- at the end of 10 seconds? Answer. s(10) = 6· 10² + 10 + 8 = 618 meters. b) What is the velocity at the end of 10 seconds?
Problem 1. It has been found by experiment that a body falling from rest under the influence of gravity, follows approximately this equation of motion: s(t) = 9.8 t ². s is the distance fallen measured in meters; t is the time elapsed measured in seconds. a) At the end of 3 seconds, how far has the body fallen? To see the answer, pass your mouse over the colored area. s(3) = 9.8 × 3² = 9.8 × 9 = 88.2 m. a) What is its velocity at the end of 3 seconds?
The second derivative The derivative of y = f(x) -- y'(x) -- will itself be a function of x. This new function may also be differentiable, in which case we call the derivative of the first derivative of y the second derivative. The notation for
Consider this equation of motion, s(t) = 3t ². Then the first derivative is the velocity v:
The second derivative is the rate of change of the velocity with respect to time. That is called the acceleration a:
If t is measured in seconds and s in meters, then the units of velocity are meters per second, which we abbreviate as m/sec. The units of acceleration are then meters per second per second, which we abbreviate as m/sec². Problem 2. A body moves in a straight line according to this equation of motion: s(t) = 10t ² − 4t + 8, where t is measured in seconds and s in meters. a) What is its position at the end of 5 sec? s(5) = 10· 5² − 4· 5 + 8 = 238 m. b) What is the equation for its velocity v at any time t ?
c) What is its velocity v at at the end of 5 seconds? v(5) = 20· 5 − 4 = 96 m/sec. d) What is the equation for its acceleration a at any time t ?
e) What is its acceleration at the end of 5 seconds? a(5) = 20 m/sec². Problem 3. Under the influence of gravity, a body moves according to this equation of motion: s(t) = ½gt ² + s0 a) What is the physical significance of the constant s0? It is the body's initial position, s(0). b) How fast is the body moving after 5 seconds?
c) What is the physical significance of the constant g?
approximately 9.8 m/sec². Related rates Example 1. a) If the radius of a circle is expanding, write the equation that shows
b) If the radius is expanding at the rate of 2 cm/min, how fast is the area
r = 15 cm,
Example 2. A boy is walking at the rate of 5 miles per hour toward the foot of a flag pole 60 feet high. At what rate is he approaching the top of the pole when he is 80 feet from its foot? Solution. Draw a picture Let the boy be at the point A at a distance x from the foot of the flag pole. Let s be his distance from the top of the pole.
The figure is a right triangle. Therefore,
Differentiate implicitly with respect to t.
That is,
minus sign because x is decreasing as he approaches the flag pole. According to line 1), Therefore, Problem 4. The side of an square is a cm long, and is increasing at the rate of b cm per hour. How fast is the area increasing? 2ab cm²/hour. Problem 5. The side of an equilateral triangle is a cm long, and is increasing at the rate of b cm per hour. How fast is the area increasing?
½ab Problem 6. a) The surface area S of a sphere is given by the formula S = 4πr². If r changes with time, how does S change?
If r changes with time, how does V change?
Problem 7. The base and height of a rectangle are b and h, and they are changing at the rates p, q respectively. Prove that the area A is changing at the rate bq + hp. A = bh. According to the product rule:
Problem 8. a) A ladder 50 feet long is leaning against a wall. If the foot of the ladder
If the foot is being pulled away at the rate of 3 ft/min, then b) when the foot is 14 feet from the wall, how fast is the top 7/8 ft/min. c) when is the top descending at the rate of 4 ft/min? When the bottom is 40 feet from the wall. d) When will the top and bottom move at the same rate?
When the bottom is 25
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