Displaying 21 - 29 of 29 Resources

Projectile Motion

  • Determine how each parameter (initial height, initial angle, initial speed, mass, diameter, and altitude) affects the trajectory of an object, with and without air resistance.
  • Predict how varying the initial conditions will affect a projectile’s path, and provide an explanation for the prediction.
  • Estimate where an object will land, given its initial conditions.
  • Determine that the x and y motion of a projectile are independent.
  • Investigate the variables that affect the drag force.
  • Describe the the effect that the drag force has on the velocity and acceleration.
  • Discuss projectile motion using common vocabulary (such as: launch angle, initial speed, initial height, range, time).
Subject and Topic
Form 2
Physics
Motion in a straight line
Distance and displacement
Resource Type
Simulatie
Language
English
Publisher
pHET Interactive Simulations
Publication Date
No date
Creator/Author
Amy Rouinfar (lead designer - HTML5)
Keyword
Kinetic Energy
Projectile motion
Vectors

Projectile motion graphs

Visualising position, velocity and acceleration in two-dimensions for projectile motion.

Subject and Topic
Form 2
Physics
Motion in a straight line
Distance and displacement
Resource Type
Video
Language
English
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
2018
Creator/Author
Khan
Keyword
Projectile motion
Projectile motion graphs
Position

Ramp: Forces and Motion

  • Predict, qualitatively, how an external force will affect the speed and direction of an object's motion.
  • Explain the effects with the help of a free body diagram.
  • Use free body diagrams to draw position, velocity, acceleration and force graphs and vice versa.
  • Explain how the graphs relate to one another.
  • Given a scenario or a graph, sketch all four graphs.
Subject and Topic
Form 2
Physics
Motion in a straight line
Equations of uniformly accelerated motion
Resource Type
Simulatie
Language
English
Publisher
pHET Interactive Simulations
Publication Date
No date
Creator/Author
Sam Reid (Developer)
Keyword
Force
Velocity
Acceleration

Space station speed in orbit

Speed necessary for the space station to stay in orbit.

Subject and Topic
Form 2
Physics
Motion in a straight line
Motion under gravity
Resource Type
Video
Language
English
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
2011
Creator/Author
Sal Khan
Keyword
Speed
Gravity
Law of Universal Gravitation

Vector Addition

  • Describe a vector in your own words
  • Explain a method to add vectors
  • Compare and contrast the component styles
  • Decompose a vector into components
  • Describe what happens to a vector when it is multiplied by a scalar
  • Arrange vectors graphically to represent vector addition or subtraction
Subject and Topic
Form 2
Physics
Motion in a straight line
Distance and displacement
Resource Type
Simulatie
Language
English
Publisher
pHET Interactive Simulations
Publication Date
No date
Creator/Author
Michael Dubson (Developer/Lead)
Keyword
Vectors

Viewing g as the value of Earth's gravitational field near the surface

Viewing g as the value of Earth's gravitational field near the surface rather than the acceleration due to gravity near Earth's surface for an object in freefall.

Subject and Topic
Form 2
Physics
Motion in a straight line
Motion under gravity
Resource Type
Video
Language
English
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
2011
Creator/Author
Sal Khan
Keyword
Gravity
Law of Universal Gravitation

What is Physics

This section introduces you to the realm of physics, and discusses applications of physics in other disciplines of study. It also describes the methods by which science is done, and how scientists communicate their results to each other.

Physics is a branch of science. The word science comes from a Latin word that means having knowledge, and refers the knowledge of how the physical world operates, based on objective evidence determined through observation and experimentation. A key requirement of any scientific explanation of a natural phenomenon is that it must be testable; one must be able to devise and conduct an experimental investigation that either supports or refutes the explanation. It is important to note that some questions fall outside the realm of science precisely because they deal with phenomena that are not scientifically testable. This need for objective evidence helps define the investigative process scientists follow, which will be described later in this chapter.

Subject and Topic
Form 1
Physics
Introduction to Physics
Concept of Physics
Resource Type
Studieboeken
Language
English
Publisher
openstax
Publication Date
2020
Creator/Author
Openstax
Keyword
Atom
Classical Physics
Modern Physics
Physics
Theory of relativity
Download

Links

Why distance is area under velocity-time line

Understanding why distance is area under velocity-time line.

Subject and Topic
Form 2
Physics
Motion in a straight line
Speed and velocity
Resource Type
Video
Language
English
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
2012
Creator/Author
Sal Khan
Keyword
Distance
Velocity

Would a brick or feather fall faster?

What would fall faster on the moon, a brick or a feather?

Subject and Topic
Form 2
Physics
Motion in a straight line
Motion under gravity
Resource Type
Video
Language
English
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
2011
Creator/Author
Sal Khan
Keyword
Gravity
One dimensional motion