Unit 5 Forces and Motion.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Read page E-3. 3 truths and a lie 1.In the United States, a disabling injury from a motor-vehicle accident happens every 13 seconds. 2.Men and women are.
Advertisements

Loading… … Safety features of a car. Introduction Cars today are much safer to travel in than cars ten or twenty years ago. Cars today are much safer.
Natural Laws & Car Control
STOPPING THE #1 KILLER OF TEENS IN AMERICA. TOO MANY TEENS ARE DYING Motor vehicle crashes are the #1 killer of teens in America About 400 junior high.
Idaho Public Driver Education Natural Laws Affecting Vehicle Control
Chapter 5 Natural Laws and Car Control
Do Now for 5/21/13 Take out E83 #6 and get ready to hand in Study for quiz HW: Anything not completed in class. E84 will be checked tomorrow.
Do Now for 5/21/13 Take out E83 #6 and get ready to hand in
NATURAL LAWS AND CAR CONTROL
Background  Leading the market in car safety for 80 years  Have created features such as;  Three point seat belt  Rear facing child seats  Side impact.
Announcement- Star Songs Your group will bring: –An easy-to-read document with your lyrics –Musical instrument(s) –3 visual aids (pictures, diagrams, etc)
Activity 82 Braking Distance
Activity 84 Decelerating Safely
Teaching note Just in case you have never tried this before. This is split into 6 spaced learning presentations. The idea is that each one is presented.
Momentum 5 th form IGCSE Unit describe the factors affecting vehicle stopping distance including speed, mass, road condition and reaction time.
Chapter 1 You are the driver.
Challenge: Are some types of cars more dangerous than other types?
Do Now for 5/20/13 Take out E84 Report HW: Quiz on E81 through 84 tomorrow. E83#6 due tomorrow.
The High Way Transportation System and Risk Management Traffic Laws.
Finish Activity 73 ► Follow procedure steps 3-7 ► Discuss in your groups and answer analysis questions 3-5.
Chapter 5 Natural Laws and Car Control
Chapter 5 Controlling your vehicle
So, You Wanna Buy a Car? What goes into buying your own vehicle?
Choosing A Safe Vehicle
How does NHTSA perform the frontal crash rating and how are vehicles rated? Vehicles are crashed into a fixed barrier at 35 miles per hour (mph), which.
1 Chapter 5 Natural Laws & Car Control. 2 Gravity Gravity- Pulls all objects toward the center of the earth. When driving downhill, gravity speeds you.
NATURAL LAWS AND CAR CONTROL
Accident Scene Safety Module 1 – Vehicle Safety Section 1 - Driving Safety.
Additional Physics – Forces L/O :- To evaluate the use of different car safety features “Clunk, Click!” Exam Date -
Do Now for 4/9/13 Open books to page E-4 HW: Complete analysis Extra credit and missing work due Wednesday.
Activity 84 Analysis Choose one of the safety features described in the reading. Use the terms inertia, force, and deceleration to describe how the safety.
Activity 88: Safety for All
Stop Speeding Before It Stops You!. FACES4 Families Against Chronic Excessive Speed 4 Every fatality on our roadways due to aggressive speed has a face.
Chapter 3, Section 2 Newton’s 1 st Law of Motion: Life and Death before and after Seat Belts.
73 Choosing a Safe Vehicle. LIMITED LICENSE TO MODIFY. These PowerPoint® slides may be modified only by teachers currently teaching the SEPUP course to.
77 Mass and Collision. LIMITED LICENSE TO MODIFY. These PowerPoint® slides may be modified only by teachers currently teaching the SEPUP course to customize.
Activity 82 Major Concepts Friction is a force that will cause changes in the speed of an object’s motion. The motion of an object can be described by.
Car Crash Lab A long term project to summarize our mechanics unit!
STOPPING THE #1 KILLER OF TEENS IN AMERICA. Motor vehicle crashes are the #1 killer of teens in America About 400 junior high teens die each year in car.
Lesson Plan Day 7 >Power Point Day 7 >First aid booklet, what two do in emergencies, and what to do until the ambulance arrives. >Review techniques on.
An Egg-citing Crash. Objectives of Lesson Automotive safety features that help to save lives. What Crumple Zones are and how they help us. The physics.
Racing Ahead By making accurate measurements of speed and acceleration, I can relate the motion of an object to the forces acting on it and apply this.
SAFETY & VEHICLE DESIGN Copyright © 2016 STC, UK.
Chapter 5 Natural Laws and Car Control
UNIT 5 CHALLENGES TO VEHICLE CONTROL
My Dream car Design and Safety.
Independent Study We have done a lot of work on pressure, energy, work, power, forces, acceleration, velocity etc. Can you now pull that all together and.
Vehicle Crash Testing Adam Hedges.
Complete the sheet on speed-time graphs… you have 15 mins
Monday 10-1 Physical Science.
THE PHYSICS OF CAR SAFETY
Gravity and Kinetic Energy Teaching Slides, 3.1
Name Unit Safety Officer
A long term project to summarize our mechanics unit!
Stopping distances.
A project to summarize our mechanics unit!
Unit 5: Natural Laws and Car Control in Adverse Conditions
Protecting Our Young Riders
The Driving Task DRIVER EDUCATION.
What Do You See? Communication Sets the Stage for Learning
THE YOUTH IN THE SYSTEM OF ROAD SAFETY
FATAL FIVE SEAT BELTS & HELMETS
Chapter 5 Natural Laws & Car Control
A long term project to summarize our mechanics unit!
How does NHTSA perform the frontal crash rating and how are vehicles rated? Vehicles are crashed into a fixed barrier at 35 miles per hour (mph), which.
Newton’s 1st Law of Motion: Life and Death before and after Seat Belts
2009 Saturn Aura Hybrid By. Student A.
Force and Motion (H) Newton's second law. Inertia. Weight.
lesson 9.5 CONTROLLING FORCE OF IMPACT
lesson 17.1 BUYING A VEHICLE
Presentation transcript:

Unit 5 Forces and Motion

Choosing A Safe Vehicle Activity 73 Choosing A Safe Vehicle

Activity 73: Choosing A Safe Vehicle Challenge  Which vehicle do you think is safer? Key Vocabulary: Evidence Advantage Disadvantage Trade-off physics Definitions are on a different slide!

Warm-Up Write the words CAR ACCIDENT in your notes. Write down the first ten things that come to mind when you hear those words. Did you know that car accidents… The leading cause of death by unintentional injury for ages 1-44 Most commonly affect people ages 15-24 and over 75

How has this been evident over time? What do car accidents have to do with science? Understanding the physics of why and how cars move help engineers to design better, safer cars How has this been evident over time?

What is PHYSICS? Physics is the science that deals with matter, energy, motion, and force. Evidence is information that is gained by direct observation or from reliable sources and can be used to formulate ideas about the natural world.

What measurements do you think scientists and engineers find useful when studying car safety and accidents? As we move through this unit, we will be learning the specifics of forces and motion that helps engineers and scientists make vehicles safer

What about different types of vehicles? Each vehicle has a Crash-Test Rating This is a five-star rating scale developed by the National Highway Traffic Safety Association (NHTSA) that is used to determine the likelihood of injuries that could occur from a collision

Front-End Collisions Tests are run on each vehicle and a score is given to each based on three criteria: head injury chest deceleration femur load

Rear-End Collisions This is a four-level, color-coded system used by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS): Good = green Acceptable = yellow Marginal = orange Poor = red

Procedures (Page E-5) Lets read the introduction together as a class. With a partner from your group, complete steps 1 and 2. Get a copy of Student Sheet 73.1 from your teacher. Continue to steps 3 and 4.

Advantages/ Disadvantages What are some of the advantages for Car 1? What are some disadvantages? What are some of the advantages for Car 2? What are some of the trade-offs of choosing one of these cars? (What advantages are you giving up to gain a different advantage?)

Procedures (Page E-5) Continue to Part B. Complete steps 5-7 with your partner now.

Is this what you had?

Analysis Questions AQ3: What factors other than safety do people consider when buying a car? People typically consider looks (color, style), price, cargo size, how many passengers can fit, and fuel economy. It is likely that people think that looks are important feature, although performance or price are also important.

AQ4: Do you think that features can: A: reduce damage, injuries, and fatalities in car accidents? Explain Features such as seat belts or airbags reduce the effects of accidents by padding the impact B: prevent accidents? Brakes that function well or mirrors and visors improve the ability to see can prevent accidents. Height can prevent rollovers and that better handling (or even greater acceleration) can help drivers avoid accidents

AQ5: Which vehicle do you think is safer? If you support Vehicle 1  the greater height or mass, lower top speed, or slower acceleration make it more safe If you support Vehicle 2  the number of airbags and shorter stopping distance make it more safe.

Follow Up Discussion Look back at what you wrote in your notebooks for procedure step 1. Have you changed your mind about anything since completing the activity? What are some questions about car accidents and car features that you would like answered to help you to decide what makes a safe car?