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Directed Reading for Content Mastery

Overview Motion and Momentum


kilograms
1.

Directions: Complete the concept map using the terms in the list below. meters per second momentum velocity

mass

and

2.

which is measured in

which is indicated by

3.

4.

Copyright Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Directions: Write the letters of the words or phrases that correctly answer the following questions. 5. Which of the following are objects in motion? a. rose bush b. puddle of water a. location b. mass c. both a and b d. neither a or b c. both a and b d. neither a or b

6. When something is in motion it is changing ______.

Directions: Answer the following questions on the lines provided. 7. What is happening to an object when it has a negative acceleration?

8. If a moving object speeds up, in what direction is the acceleration?

Motion and Momentum

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Meeting Individual Needs

is the product of an objects

Name

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Directed Reading for Content Mastery

Section 1 Section 2

I I

What is motion? Acceleration

Directions: Circle the term that correctly completes the sentence. 1. A golfballs acceleration is +3 m/s2. The ball is (speeding up, slowing down.) 2. An objects (speed, displacement) represents its distance and direction from its starting point. 3. A student walks 10 m in 2 s. Her average speed is (20 m/s, 5 m/s). 4. A plane moving at a rate of 400 km/h west has a different (velocity, speed) than a plane moving 400 km/h northwest. 5. During positive acceleration, an objects final speed is (greater, less) than its initial speed. 6. To calculate acceleration, first subtract the initial speed from the final speed. Then divide this difference by the (distance moved, time period). Directions: The graph describes the movement of a car. Match the letters in the graph to the sentences below. 7. The car moves at a constant speed. 8. The car sits motionless at a stoplight. 9. The car undergoes negative acceleration as it approaches a stoplight. 10. The car undergoes positive acceleration as it moves away from a stoplight.
90
Copyright Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Velocity (km/hr)

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80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10
A

Time (minutes)

20 Motion and Momentum

Name

Date

Class
I

Directed Reading for Content Mastery

Section 3

Momentum

Directions: Replace each italicized word in the statements below with the correct term. 1. The more velocity an object has the harder it is to slow it down, speed it up, or turn it. 2. Objects with more mass have less inertia. 3. The weight of an object is the amount of matter in an object. 4. The SI unit for mass is the gram. 5. The tendency of an object to resist change in its motion is called speed. 6. The more mass an object has, the harder it is to change its acceleration. 7. Velocity and momentum are defined the same for all objects, regardless of their mass. 8. The inertia of an object is a measure of how hard it is to stop an object.
Copyright Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Directions: Answer the following questions on the lines provided. 9. State the law of the conservation of momentum.

10. What can the law of conservation of momentum predict?

Motion and Momentum

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Meeting Individual Needs

Name

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Directed Reading for Content Mastery

Key Terms Motion and Momentum


1 2

Directions: Use the clues below to complete the crossword puzzle.

Across 2. A measure of how hard it is to stop an object 4. Distance traveled divided by the time taken to travel the distance 5. Amount of matter in an object 6. Change in velocity divided by the time it takes for the change to occur 7. Speed and direction of motion of an object Down 1. Speed of an object at one instant of time is the objects ______ speed 3. Total distance divided by the time taken is an objects ______ speed 8. Tendency of an object to resist change in its motion
22 Motion and Momentum

Copyright Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Meeting Individual Needs

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Reinforcement

What is motion?

Directions: Answer the following questions on the lines provided.


1. How do you define motion?

2. When you are in bed asleep, are you in motion? Explain. 3. Explain the difference between distance and displacement.

Directions: In the figure below, you travel from home at A, to the park at B, to the store at C, to a friends house at D. Study the map and answer questions 4 through 8.

Copyright Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4. What distance did you travel? 5. When you were at your friends house at D, what was your displacement? 6. If you leave home at 1:00 and get to your friends house at 5:00, what was your average speed? 7. If you travel from your house at A to the park at B in 0.5 h, what is your velocity? 8. Explain why the speed in question 6 didnt equal your velocity in question 7.

Directions: Answer the following question on the line provided.


9. What does a horizontal line mean on a speed-time graph?

Motion and Momentum

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Meeting Individual Needs

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Reinforcement

Acceleration

Directions: In the space provided, substitute a word for the word in italics to make the statement correct.
1. Velocity is a change in an objects motion. 2. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity with distance. 3. When an object slows down, it has no acceleration.

Directions: Answer the following questions on the lines provided.


4. A merry-go-round horse travels at a constant speed. Is it accelerating? Explain.

Velocity

15

10

5
A

D H I

10

15

20

25 Time (s)

30

35

40

45

50

7. In what interval does the object have the fastest acceleration? 8. Over what interval(s) does the object have a negative acceleration? 9. Over what interval is the object stopped?

28 Motion and Momentum

Copyright Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Meeting Individual Needs

5. What is the unit for speed? For acceleration? 6. If an object has an acceleration of 3 m/s2, describe its motion.

Directions: Study the velocity-time graph for an object in motion. Then answer the following questions.
25
G

20
F

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Reinforcement

Momentum

Directions: In question 1, below, a code letter has been substituted for every letter of the alphabet. To find out what the sentence says, use the following key to decode it. In the key, the code letters are shown directly below the letters they stand for. Write the correct letter above each code letter, then read the sentence.
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z L V Y Q G Z M O B P F S R J D T E N I H X C K M A U 1. _______ HOG __________ HDHLS ______________ RDRGJHXR ________ G LYO ____ DZ _____________ DVPGYHI _______ QDGI ________ HOLH _____ JDH __________ YO L J M G

_____________ YDSSBQG

________ KBHO

__________ DHOGN

2. What is the law that is stated above?

Directions: Correctly complete each sentence by underlining the best of the three choices in parentheses.
3. A feather floating in the air has (more, less, the same) momentum as a bowling ball on a shelf. 4. The momentum of an object depends on its mass and (velocity, acceleration, inertia). 5. The tendency for an object to resist change in its motion, is its (momentum, inertia, weight). 6. We say that momentum is conserved, yet objects slow down after collisions. This is because of
Copyright Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

(inertia, friction, mass).

Directions: Answer the following questions on the lines provided.


7. A 500 g model train car traveling at 0.8 m/s collides with a 300 g stationary car. The cars hook up and move off down the track together. How fast are they going?

8. Which has a greater momentum, a car or a bike moving at the same speed? 9. What happens when two objects with the same mass collide?

Motion and Momentum

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