Explain clearly, with examples, the distinction between
$(a)$ magnitude of displacement over an interval of time, and the total length of path covered by a particle over the same interval.
$(b)$ magnitude of average velocity over an interval of time, and the average speed over the same interval. [Average speed of a particle over an interval of time is defined as the total path length divided by the time interval].
Show in both $(a)$ and $(b)$ that the second quantity is either greater than or equal to the first. When is the equality sign true? [For simplicity, consider one-dimensional motion only].

Vedclass pdf generator app on play store
Vedclass iOS app on app store
(N/A) The magnitude of displacement over an interval of time is the shortest distance (a straight line) between the initial and final positions of the particle.
The total path length of a particle is the actual distance covered by the particle in a given interval of time.
For example, consider a particle moving from point $A$ to point $B$ and then returning to point $C$, taking a total time $t$. As shown in the figure, the magnitude of displacement is $AC$, whereas the total path length is $AB + BC$.
Note that the magnitude of displacement can never be greater than the total path length. However, in cases where the particle moves in a single direction without turning back, both quantities are equal.
$(b)$ Magnitude of average velocity = $\frac{\text{Magnitude of displacement}}{\text{Time interval}}$
For the given particle, Average velocity = $\frac{AC}{t}$.
Average speed = $\frac{\text{Total path length}}{\text{Time interval}} = \frac{AB + BC}{t}$.
Since $(AB + BC) > AC$, the average speed is greater than the magnitude of average velocity. The two quantities are equal if the particle continues to move along a straight line in the same direction.

Explore More

Similar Questions

$A$ particle moves with constant speed $v$ along a regular hexagon $ABCDEF$ in the same order. What is the magnitude of the average velocity for its motion from $A$ to $F$?

Difficult
View Solution

$A$ person travels $x$ distance with velocity $v_1$ and then $x$ distance with velocity $v_2$ in the same direction. The average velocity of the person is $v$. Then the relation between $v, v_1$ and $v_2$ will be:

The velocity of an object moving in a straight line path is given as a function of time by $v = 6t - 3t^2$,where $v$ is in $m/s$ and $t$ is in $s$. The average velocity of the object between $t = 0$ and $t = 2 \ s$ is

$A$ person walks along a straight road from his house to a market $2.5 \,km$ away with a speed of $5 \,km/h$ and instantly turns back and reaches his house with a speed of $7.5 \,km/h$. The average speed of the person during the time interval $0$ to $50 \,min$ is (in $m/s$)

$A$ train travels from city-$A$ to city-$B$ with a constant speed of $18 \,ms^{-1}$ and returns back to city-$A$ with a constant speed of $36 \,ms^{-1}$. Find its average speed during the journey. (in $\,ms^{-1}$)

Vedclass Products

For Students

Vedclass Test Series

Mock tests in real JEE/NEET style with performance analysis. 5-day free trial.

Start Free Trial
For Teachers

Exam Paper Generator

Generate Set A/B/C/D exam papers from 7.5L+ questions in 2 minutes. 3 chapters free.

Try Free
For Institutes

Online Exam Module

Live online exams with unlimited students, 360° analytics & white-label branding.

See Demo