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motion |
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motion, the change of position of one body with respect to another. The rate of change is the speed speed, change in distance with respect to time. Speed is a scalar rather than a vector quantity; i.e., the speed of a body tells one how fast the body is moving but not the direction of the motion. ..... Click the link for more information. of the body. If the direction of motion is also given, then the velocity velocity, change in displacement with respect to time. Displacement is the vector counterpart of distance, having both magnitude and direction. Velocity is therefore also a vector quantity. The magnitude of velocity is known as the speed of a body. ..... Click the link for more information. of the body is determined; velocity is a vector U [−3,1] and V [5,2], one can add their corresponding components to find the resultant vector R [2,3], or one can graph U and V on a set of coordinate axes and complete the parallelogram formed with U and V ..... Click the link for more information. quantity, having both magnitude and direction, while speed is a scalar quantity, having only magnitude. Types of MotionUniform motion is motion at a constant speed in a straight line. Uniform motion can be described by a few simple equations. The distance s covered by a body moving with velocity v during a time t is given by s=vt. If the velocity is changing, either in direction or magnitude, it is called accelerated motion (see acceleration acceleration, change in the velocity of a body with respect to time. Since velocity is a vector quantity, involving both magnitude and direction, acceleration is also a vector. In order to produce an acceleration, a force must be applied to the body. The Laws of Motion and RelativityThe relationship between force force, commonly, a "push" or "pull," more properly defined in physics as a quantity that changes the motion, size, or shape of a body. Force is a vector quantity, having both magnitude and direction. Motion at speeds approaching the speed of light light, visible electromagnetic radiation . Of the entire electromagnetic spectrum , the human eye is sensitive to only a tiny part, the part that is called light. The wavelengths of visible light range from about 350 or 400 nm to about 750 or 800 nm. It was once thought that there existed a light-carrying medium, known as the luminiferous ether ether or aether, in physics and astronomy, a hypothetical medium for transmitting light and heat (radiation), filling all unoccupied space; it is also called luminiferous ether. In Newtonian physics all waves are propagated through a medium, e.g. BibliographySee J. C. Maxwell, Matter and Motion (1877, repr. 1952). motionChange in position of a body relative to another body or with respect to a frame of reference or coordinate system. Motion occurs along a definite path, the nature of which determines the character of the motion. Translational motion occurs if all points in a body have similar paths relative to another body. Rotational motion occurs when any line on a body changes its orientation relative to a line on another body. Motion relative to a moving body, such as motion on a moving train, is called relative motion. Indeed, all motions are relative, but motions relative to the Earth or to any body fixed to the Earth are often assumed to be absolute, as the effects of the Earth's motion are usually negligible. See also Brownian motion; periodic motion; simple harmonic motion; simple motion; uniform circular motion. motion 1. the process of continual change in the physical position of an object; movement 2. a movement or action, esp of part of the human body; a gesture 3. a. the capacity for movement b. a manner of movement, esp walking; gait 4. a mental impulse 5. Politics a formal proposal to be discussed and voted on in a debate, meeting, etc. 6. Law an application made to a judge or court for an order or ruling necessary to the conduct of legal proceedings 7. Brit a. the evacuation of the bowels b. excrement 8. a. part of a moving mechanism b. the action of such a part 9. Music the upward or downward course followed by a part or melody. Parts whose progressions are in the same direction exhibit similar motion, while two parts whose progressions are in opposite directions exhibit contrary motion Motion Andrew. born 1952, British poet and biographer; his collections include Pleasure Steamers (1978) and Public Property (2002): poet laureate from 1999 motion [′mō·shən] (mechanics) A continuous change of position of a body. Motion If the position of a material system as measured by a particular observer changes with respect to time, that system is said to be in motion with respect to the observer. Absolute motion, then, has no significance, and only relative motion may be defined; what one observer measures to be at rest, another observer in a different frame of reference may regard as being in motion. See Frame of reference, Relative motion The time derivatives of the various coordinates used to specify the system may be used to prescribe the motion at any instant of time. How the motion develops in subsequent instants is then determined by the laws of motion. In classical dynamics it is supposed that in principle the motion and configuration of the system may be specified to an arbitrary precision, although in quantum mechanics it is recognized that the measurement of the one disturbs the other. The most general theory of motion that has yet been developed is quantum field theory, which combines both quantum mechanics and relativity theory, as well as the experimentally observed fact that elementary particles can be created and annihilated. See Degree of freedom (mechanics), Dynamics, Hamilton's equations of motion, Harmonic motion, Kinematics, Kinetics (classical mechanics), Lagrange's equations, Newton's laws of motion, Oscillation, Periodic motion, Quantum field theory, Quantum mechanics, Rectilinear motion, Relativity, Rotational motion How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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