Hi all.
I kindly need help understanding what this question is asking for and solving for it in the right manner.
s(t) is the position of a particle moving along a straight line at time t.
a) Find find the velocity and acceleration of the particle.
b) Find all times in the given interval when the particle is stationary.
s(t) = t2 - 2t + 6 for 0 ≤ t ≤ 2
Here is my approach so far:
position s(t) is somewhere between 0 and 2 ∴ V(s(t)) and A(V)
so I first need to find for the change in position by finding the slope, or the derivative of s(t)
s'(t) = t2 - 2t + 6
s'(t) = 2t - 2 + 0
s'(t) = 2t - 2
s'(t) = 2 = 2t
s'(t) = 2/2 = 2t/2
s'(t) = 1 ∴ m=1
because t is somewhere between 0 and 2 then the change is -2
y-y1=m(x-x1)
y-(-2)=1(x-2)
y=x-2-2
y=x-4
so for a) I have V(t-4) = s/t (speed/time) and A(V(t-4))=ds/t (change in speed/time)
for b) I have that the particle is always moving.
I kindly need help understanding what this question is asking for and solving for it in the right manner.
s(t) is the position of a particle moving along a straight line at time t.
a) Find find the velocity and acceleration of the particle.
b) Find all times in the given interval when the particle is stationary.
s(t) = t2 - 2t + 6 for 0 ≤ t ≤ 2
Here is my approach so far:
position s(t) is somewhere between 0 and 2 ∴ V(s(t)) and A(V)
so I first need to find for the change in position by finding the slope, or the derivative of s(t)
s'(t) = t2 - 2t + 6
s'(t) = 2t - 2 + 0
s'(t) = 2t - 2
s'(t) = 2 = 2t
s'(t) = 2/2 = 2t/2
s'(t) = 1 ∴ m=1
because t is somewhere between 0 and 2 then the change is -2
y-y1=m(x-x1)
y-(-2)=1(x-2)
y=x-2-2
y=x-4
so for a) I have V(t-4) = s/t (speed/time) and A(V(t-4))=ds/t (change in speed/time)
for b) I have that the particle is always moving.