Linear motion (also called rectilinear motion) is a motion along a straight line, and can therefore be described mathematically using only one spatial dimension. The linear motion can be of two types: uniform linear motion with constant velocity or zero acceleration; non uniform linear motion with variable velocity or non-zero acceleration. The motion of a particle (a point-like object) along a line can be described by its position
Contents
- Displacement
- Velocity
- Average velocity
- Instantaneous velocity
- Speed
- Acceleration
- Jerk
- Jounce
- Equations of kinematics
- Analogy between linear and rotational motion
- References
Linear motion is the most basic of all motion. According to Newton's first law of motion, objects that do not experience any net force will continue to move in a straight line with a constant velocity until they are subjected to a net force. Under everyday circumstances, external forces such as gravity and friction can cause an object to change the direction of its motion, so that its motion cannot be described as linear.
One may compare linear motion to general motion. In general motion, a particle's position and velocity are described by vectors, which have a magnitude and direction. In linear motion, the directions of all the vectors describing the system are equal and constant which means the objects move along the same axis and do not change direction. The analysis of such systems may therefore be simplified by neglecting the direction components of the vectors involved and dealing only with the magnitude.
Neglecting the rotation and other motions of the Earth, an example of linear motion is the ball thrown straight up and falling back straight down.
Displacement
The motion in which all the particles of a body move through the same distance in the same time is called translatory motion. There are two types of translatory motions: rectilinear motion; curvilinear motion. Since linear motion is a motion in a single dimension, the distance traveled by an object in particular direction is the same as displacement. The SI unit of displacement is the metre. If
The equivalent of displacement in rotational motion is the angular displacement
Velocity
Velocity = displacement / time. Velocity is defined as the rate of change of displacement with respect to time. The SI unit of velocity is
Average velocity
The average velocity is the ratio of total displacement
where:
Instantaneous velocity
The instantaneous velocity can be found by differentiating the displacement with respect to time.
Speed
Speed is the absolute value of velocity i.e. speed is always positive. The unit of speed is metre per second. If
The magnitude of the instantaneous velocity is the instantaneous speed.
Acceleration
Acceleration is defined as the rate of change of velocity with respect to time. Acceleration is the second derivative of displacement i.e. acceleration can be found by differentiating position with respect to time twice or differentiating velocity with respect to time once. The SI unit of acceleration is
If
The instantaneous acceleration is the limit of the ratio
Jerk
The rate of change of acceleration, the third derivative of displacement is known as jerk. The SI unit of jerk is
Jounce
The rate of change of jerk, the fourth derivative of displacement is known as jounce. The SI unit of jounce is
Equations of kinematics
In case of constant acceleration, the four physical quantities acceleration, velocity, time and displacement can be related by using the Equations of motion
here,
These relationships can be demonstrated graphically. The gradient of a line on a displacement time graph represents the velocity. The gradient of the velocity time graph gives the acceleration while the area under the velocity time graph gives the displacement. The area under an acceleration time graph gives the change in velocity.
Analogy between linear and rotational motion
The following table refers to rotation of a rigid body about a fixed axis:
The following table shows the analogy in derived SI units: