Week 1 Cheatsheet — Vectors and Motion in 1D
medium exam quiz
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← Back to weekHow this week breaks down
Three quantities (displacement, velocity, acceleration), one process (Model → Visualise → Solve → Assess), and the link between them on a graph. Skim this once, then move to the in-depth note.
| Topic | What you do |
|---|---|
| Scalars vs vectors | Decide whether magnitude alone is enough, or whether direction matters too. |
| Kinematic quantities | Use and . Always track sign. |
| Motion graphs | Gradient derivative; area integral. |
| Four-step approach | Model, Visualise (slowly), Solve, Assess. |
1 — Vocabulary: scalars vs vectors
| Quantity | Type | Symbol | Unit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Time | Scalar | Independent variable | ||
| Distance | Scalar | Total path length | ||
| Speed | Scalar | — | , magnitude only | |
| Displacement | Vector | or | , carries sign | |
| Velocity | Vector | Rate of change of displacement | ||
| Acceleration | Vector | Rate of change of velocity |
Vectors are drawn as arrows with the tail at the point of measurement. Example: ” south-west” is a displacement vector. Don’t lose the direction in your algebra.
2 — Core formulas
Average velocity (slide 26–27)
Average speed (slide 27)
Speed and velocity differ only when the path is not a straight line in one direction.
Average acceleration (slide 30)
Units check: .
3 — Motion graphs (the slope/area trick)
This is the single most important diagram in the week:
| Graph type | Slope at a point means… | Area under the curve means… |
|---|---|---|
| vs | velocity at that instant | (not used) |
| vs | acceleration at that instant | displacement over that interval |
| vs | jerk (not in this week) | change in velocity over that interval |
Sign conventions on a – graph (slide 30)
| Slope of vs | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Positive | Velocity increasing (object speeding up in positive direction or slowing in negative) |
| Zero (flat) | Constant velocity — zero acceleration |
| Negative | Velocity decreasing (slowing in positive direction, or speeding in negative) |
Sign conventions on an – graph
| Slope of vs | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Positive | Moving in positive direction |
| Zero (flat) | Stationary — zero velocity |
| Negative | Moving in negative direction |
4 — The four-step problem-solving approach (slide 17)
- Model — Simplify the situation; usually “treat the object as a particle.”
- Visualise — Draw a pictorial representation; spend your time here. Include axes, knowns, unknowns, symbols, units.
- Solve — Write equations using only previously defined symbols. Plug in numbers last.
- Assess — Check units, check sign, check magnitude (sanity check).
Every visualisation should contain (slides 20–21):
- A coordinate system showing positive direction (default: up + right).
- A particle (dot or box) representing each object.
- Defined symbols for every variable.
- Knowns and unknowns listed in SI units.
5 — Worked snippets
| Problem | Setup | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Sprinter, in (straight line) | ; speed | |
| runner, one full lap in | speed ; velocity | |
| Egg fall: after | ||
| Egg impact: in | same formula, negative sign | |
| – piecewise: then linear up to at | area under curve |
Common mistakes
- Confusing speed and velocity. Around a closed loop, speed is non-zero but velocity is zero. Always carry the sign.
- Dropping the sign of displacement. A negative is not an error — it’s motion in the negative direction. Define your axes first.
- Treating “flat on –” as zero velocity. Flat on – means zero acceleration, not zero velocity. Flat on – means zero velocity.
- Jumping straight to formulas. Slide 17: spend your time on Visualise. Numbers without a diagram = sign errors.
- Forgetting units. SI in, SI out. Always re-check at the Assess step.
- Plugging in numbers before defining symbols. Every symbol in your Solve step must already appear in your Visualise diagram.
Key formulas
For the why and full worked examples, see the in-depth note.
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Easy → hard. Reshuffles every visit.
//quiz · 1/8easy
Which symbol and unit pair is correct for acceleration?