Stopping distance
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👩 Teacher’s Guide
🎯 Objective
Students will be able to:
- Explain the main physics principles of stopping distance
- Apply equations correctly with units
- Connect force and motion ideas to real-world transport and safety
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📝 Teaching Notes
- Key idea to emphasize: Stopping distance is thinking distance plus braking distance. It depends on speed, reaction time, road conditions, and braking force.
- Common misconception: Forces are needed to keep objects moving at constant speed.
- Suggested teaching approach:
- Use free-body diagrams to show forces clearly
- Include car safety and collision examples
- Practice calculations with momentum and acceleration
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💬 Discussion Starter
Ask students:
- Why do passengers move forward when a car stops suddenly?
- How do safety features reduce forces in a crash?
- Why does speed affect stopping distance so strongly?
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🧒 Student Worksheet
Concept and Helping Material
Stopping distance is thinking distance plus braking distance. It depends on speed, reaction time, road conditions, and braking force.
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Vocabulary and Definitions
- — Rate of change of velocity
- — Mass × velocity, quantity of motion
- — Force × time, change in momentum
- — Force toward the center in circular motion
- — Constant falling speed when forces balance
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Hands-On Experiment or Activities
Activity 1: Collision with Carts
What You Need: toy carts, track, clay, stopwatch.
What You Do: Roll carts into each other and compare elastic vs inelastic collisions.
Think and Talk: What changed?
What stayed the same?
Activity 2: Stopping Distance Test
What You Need: ramp, toy car, different surfaces.
What You Do: Release car and measure braking distance on smooth vs rough surfaces.
Think and Talk: What changed?
What stayed the same?
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Practice Questions (QA)
1. What is Newton’s second law?
2. What is momentum?
3. What happens to momentum in a closed system?
4. What is impulse?
5. Why do airbags reduce injury?
6. What is terminal velocity?
7. Why is centripetal force needed?
8. What is thinking distance?
9. Why does braking distance increase with speed?
10. What is an inelastic collision?
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Reflection
- How does physics explain car safety?
- Why is understanding momentum important?