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  • - [Instructor] Pretend you are a physics student.

  • You are just getting out of class.

  • You were walking home when you remembered

  • that there was a Galaxy Wars marathon on tonight,

  • so you'd do what every physics student would do: run.

  • You're pretty motivated to get home,

  • so say you start running at six meters per second.

  • Maybe it's been a while since the last time you ran,

  • so you have to slow down a little bit

  • to two meters per second.

  • When you get a little closer to home, you say:

  • "No, Captain Antares wouldn't give up

  • "and I'm not giving up either", and you start running

  • at eight meters per second and you make it home

  • just in time for the opening music.

  • These numbers are values of the instantaneous speed.

  • The instantaneous speed is the speed of an object

  • at a particular moment in time.

  • And if you include the direction with that speed,

  • you get the instantaneous velocity.

  • In other words, eight meters per second to the right

  • was the instantaneously velocity of this person

  • at that particular moment in time.

  • Note that this is different from the average velocity.

  • If your home was 1,000 meters away from school

  • and it took you a total of 200 seconds to get there,

  • your average velocity would be five meters per second,

  • which doesn't necessarily equal the instantaneous velocities

  • at particular points on your trip.

  • In other words, let's say you jogged 60 meters

  • in a time of 15 seconds.

  • During this time you were speeding up and slowing down

  • and changing your speed at every moment.

  • Regardless of the speeding up or slowing down

  • that took place during this path,

  • your average velocity's still just gonna be

  • four meters per second to the right;

  • or, if you like, positive four meters per second.

  • Say you wanted to know the instantaneous velocity

  • at a particular point in time during this trip.

  • In that case, you'd wanna find a smaller displacement

  • over a shorter time interval

  • that's centered at that point where you're trying

  • to find the instantaneous velocity.

  • This would give you a better value for

  • the instantaneous velocity but it still wouldn't be perfect.

  • In order to better zero-in on the instantaneous velocity,

  • we could choose an even smaller displacement

  • over that even shorter time interval.

  • But we're gonna run into a problem here

  • because if you wanna find a perfect value

  • for the instantaneous velocity,

  • you'd have to take an infinitesimally-small displacement

  • divided by an infinitesimally-small time interval.

  • But that's basically zero divided by zero,

  • and for a long time no one could make any sense of this.

  • In fact, since defining motion at a particular point in time

  • seemed impossible, it made some ancient Greeks question

  • whether motion had any meaning at all.

  • They wondered weather motion was just an illusion.

  • Eventually, Sir Isaac Newton developed

  • a whole new way to do math that lets you

  • figure out answers to these types of questions.

  • Today we call the math that Newton invented calculus.

  • So if you were to ask a physicist:

  • "What's the formula for the instantaneous velocity?",

  • he or she would probably give you

  • a formula that involves calculus.

  • But, in case some of you haven't taken calculus yet,

  • I'm gonna show you a few ways to find

  • the instantaneous velocity that don't require

  • the use of calculus.

  • The first way is so simple that it's kind of obvious.

  • If you're lucky enough to have a case

  • where the velocity of an object doesn't change,

  • then the formula for average velocity is just gonna give you

  • the same number as the instantaneous velocity

  • at any point in time.

  • If your velocity is changing,

  • one way you can find the instantaneous velocity

  • is by looking at the motion on an x-versus-t graph.

  • The slope at any particular point

  • on this position-versus-time graph

  • is gonna equal the instantaneous velocity

  • at that point in time because

  • the slope is gonna give the instantaneous rate

  • at which x is changing with respect to time.

  • A third way to find the instantaneous velocity is for

  • another special case where the acceleration is constant.

  • If the acceleration is constant,

  • you can use the Kinematic Formulas

  • to find the instantaneous velocity, v, at any time, t.

  • (electronic music)

- [Instructor] Pretend you are a physics student.

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B1 中級

瞬間速度と速度|一次元運動|物理学|カーンアカデミー (Instantaneous speed and velocity | One-dimensional motion | Physics | Khan Academy)

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    楊凱翔 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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