Zaloguj się

The importance of understanding acceleration spans our day-to-day experiences, as well as the vast reaches of outer space and the tiny world of subatomic physics. In everyday conversation, to accelerate means to speed up. For instance, we are familiar with the acceleration of our car; the harder we apply our foot to the gas pedal, the faster we accelerate. The greater the acceleration, the greater the change in velocity over a given time. Acceleration is widely seen in experimental physics. In linear particle accelerator experiments, for example, subatomic particles are accelerated to very high velocities in collision experiments, which tell us information about the structure of the subatomic world as well as the origin of the universe. In space, cosmic rays are subatomic particles that have been accelerated to very high energies in supernovas (exploding massive stars) and active galactic nuclei. It is important to understand the processes that accelerate cosmic rays, because these rays contain highly penetrating radiation that can damage electronics on spacecraft, for example.

Average acceleration is the rate at which velocity changes. Recall that velocity is a vector—it has both magnitude and direction—which means that a change in velocity can be a change in magnitude (speed), or a change in direction. For example, if a runner traveling at 10 km/h due east slows to a stop, reverses direction, and continues their run at 10 km/h due west, their velocity has changed as a result of the change in direction, even though the magnitude of the velocity is the same in both directions. Thus, acceleration occurs when velocity changes in magnitude (an increase or decrease in speed) or in direction, or both.

This text is adapted from Openstax, University Physics Volume 1, Section 3.3: Average and Instantaneous Acceleration.

Tagi
Average AccelerationVelocityAccelerationParticle AcceleratorCosmic RaysSubatomic ParticlesPhysicsSpeedDirection

Z rozdziału 3:

article

Now Playing

3.5 : Average Acceleration

Motion Along a Straight Line

9.2K Wyświetleń

article

3.1 : Położenie i przemieszczenie

Motion Along a Straight Line

16.9K Wyświetleń

article

3.2 : Średnia prędkość

Motion Along a Straight Line

17.8K Wyświetleń

article

3.3 : Prędkość chwilowa - I

Motion Along a Straight Line

12.1K Wyświetleń

article

3.4 : Prędkość chwilowa - II

Motion Along a Straight Line

8.9K Wyświetleń

article

3.6 : Natychmiastowe przyspieszenie

Motion Along a Straight Line

7.4K Wyświetleń

article

3.7 : Równania kinematyczne - I

Motion Along a Straight Line

10.1K Wyświetleń

article

3.8 : Równania kinematyczne - II

Motion Along a Straight Line

9.1K Wyświetleń

article

3.9 : Równania kinematyczne - III

Motion Along a Straight Line

7.3K Wyświetleń

article

3.10 : Równania kinematyczne: rozwiązywanie problemów

Motion Along a Straight Line

11.7K Wyświetleń

article

3.11 : Ciała swobodnie spadające: Wprowadzenie

Motion Along a Straight Line

7.7K Wyświetleń

article

3.12 : Ciała swobodnie spadające: Przykład

Motion Along a Straight Line

15.3K Wyświetleń

article

3.13 : Prędkość i położenie metodą graficzną

Motion Along a Straight Line

7.0K Wyświetleń

article

3.14 : Prędkość i położenie metodą całkową

Motion Along a Straight Line

5.8K Wyświetleń

JoVE Logo

Prywatność

Warunki Korzystania

Zasady

Badania

Edukacja

O JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Wszelkie prawa zastrzeżone