Galileo's Ramp
Galileo's Ramp
Galileo's Ramp
Overview
How does an objects speed change as it rolls down a ramp? You are about to use math and physics to describe it. The experiment involves you rolling an object down a ramp and measuring its position and speed at set time intervals. I will provide you with a stopwatch, a ramp, and an object to roll. The challenge is to complete the experiment using only the provided materials. To describe the motion, you need to create a drawing, a graph, an equation, and an explanation. Here are a few equations and definitions that will help you in your investigation:
Grouping
You will work in groups of 2 or 3 students. Not 4. Dont even ask.
Monday
Learning goal: Students will understand position and velocity versus time graphs. Task: Complete the position-time and velocity-time graphs for the scenario your group chooses. Vocabulary: Position: distance from 0, measured in meters. Velocity: how fast an object is moving in the positive or negative direction, measured in meters per second (m/s). Also called speed. Example #1: Your teacher is exercising by walking around the track at school. She walks at a constant velocity of 1.4 m/s. Graph the first 60 seconds of her walk.
Example #2: Your teacher is feeling fit, so she runs for 30 seconds, gets tired and rests for 10 seconds, then runs for 20 seconds. Graph the 60 second exercise your teacher did.
Your story:
Monday Conclusions
An object is not moving or at rest Position-Time Graph Horizontal line Velocity-Time Graph Horizontal line
Horizontal line
Parabola
Radical
Tuesday
Learning goal: Students will understand how to draw a position-time graph based on data they collect. Task: Conduct the experiment described below, collect data, and analyze the results. Procedure: 1. Get a meter stick, a battery, a whiteboard, 2 different color markers, and a math book. 2. Listen to the metronome (http://www.metronomeonline.com/) your teacher has turned on. It is clicking once every second. 3. Create a small ramp with your whiteboard and a thin book. The battery should roll down the entire ramp in 4-5 seconds. If the ramp is too steep, the battery will roll too fast for you to observe. 4. Describe your ramp with words and a picture.
5. What do you think will happen to the speed of the battery as it rolls down the ramp? Will the speed increase, decrease, or stay the same? Why? 6. What shape graph do you expect if you plot on a distance-time graph? Look at the page titled Monday Conclusions to decide.
7. Hold the battery at the top of the ramp and release it. 8. Place a mark on the whiteboard for every click of the metronome. 9. Measure the distance from each mark back to the batterys starting point. Put those measurements in the table below. Time 1s 2s 3s 4s 5s Interval Trial 1 Trial 2 Trial 3 Average
Tuesday Conclusions
Plot the Average row from your data table on this graph. Sketch a curve that connects all your data.
Wednesday
Learning goal: Students will explore the meaning of a position-time graphs most important features. Task: 1. Present the graphs from the end of Tuesday. Each group will be responsible for explaining one part of their graph (chosen randomly). 2. Talk with your team to decide what these parts of the graph represent & complete the table. Feature What does it mean in the real world? vertex
y-intercept
x-intercept(s)
3. The pictured quadratic function is from data collected by Slow Steve and his partner, Bored Bob. What happened?
4. The equation to the function in #3 is f(x) = 0.05(x-3)2. The whole function is shown below. The vertex is at
Wednesday Conclusions
Slow Steve and Bored Bob decided to play around in class instead of do their final project (do they really want to repeat Math 1B? Sheesh!). Steve threw the battery up in the air and Bob counted the seconds until it hit the floor. The graph of Steves toss is shown below. The vertex is approximately
Wednesday Conclusions.
5%
P. 6 #3 and #4 as well as Wednesday Conclusions. You can recognize when the vertex of a function has been shifted to the right.
5%
Work on pp. 2-3 as well as p. 6. 50% You understand how position-time and velocitytime graphs operate as well as can explain how the graph of a function can represent a real event. Whiteboard presentations. 30% A reasonable and accurate model is presented clearly. Data table on p. 4. Results were recorded with reasonable precision (significant figures are used intelligently) and accuracy.