THE SPEED PROBLEM | |
Analysis | |
1. A CAR JOURNEY | |||
A car goes on a journey, which you can see illustrated in the graph below. The distance travelled is expressed in kilometres and the time in minutes. |
|||
1.- Change the time values
and look at the different distances covered, in kilometres.
2.- If you draw the graph in your exercise book and make a note of the distances covered and the time taken to do so you should be able to answer the following questions: ¿How
far has the car travelled? How
long has the journey taken? When
was the car stationary? What
was the car's average speed? If you take away the time when the car was stationary, what was the car's average speed? What was the average speed between every two stops? When was the car travelling the fastest? |
|||
2. THE AVERAGE SPEED | ||||
The
average speed travelled between two points in time t1 and
t2 can
be expressed as follows: |
Each section of the graph representing the car's journey can be analysed in more detail. The following Descartes window gives the average speed during a certain time interval. The time values can be written to two decimal places.
|
|||
2.-
Change
the start and finish times of the time interval in order to work out
the car's average speed between these times:[0,10], [10,17], [17,18], [18,32], [32,42], [42,50], [50,52] y [52,64].
Compare these results to the ones you got earlier.
3.- Work out the car's average speed during different intervals within the time interval [0,10]. Does the car travel at a constant speed during this time interval? Find other intervals on the journey when the car's speed was constant. Is there any connection with the fact that the graph is a straight line? 4.- Work out the average speed for different sub-intervals within the time interval [10,17].
5.- What change in speed is there? Work out which other intervals during the journey involve a change in speed. Is there a connection between the change in speed and the shape of the graph? |
||||
6.- As
you know, the speedometer in a car measures the speed that the car is
travelling at any particular moment. In other words, rather than
measure the car's speed over a time interval it tells us the car's
speed at that instant, known as the instantaneous speed. Can
you work out the speed of the car after 15 minutes? Give an
approximate value.
|
Miguel García Reyes | ||
Spanish Ministry of Education. Year 2001 | ||
Except where otherwise noted, this work is licensed under a Creative Common License