Thursday, July 18, 2013

Final Blog Post



What is Physics?
Physics is about motion. The motion of objects, light, and any other matter. It involves everything around us. From lights to colors. Everything around us is physics.

What did you think of the class?
I really like physics. I didn't really know what to expect. I wasn't really sure what physics was, I just knew it was abut motion. Now that I have taken the class, it was a really fun class to take. It explains a lot about every day life stuff like why things have color and about the motion of objects. This class has gotten me more interested in the subject and thinking about taking more classes on physics.

What did you learn in the class?
I learned an extreme amount in the class. I learned too much to put in this blog post, but in the simplest way to put it, I learned physics is not just about motion. It is about everything around us. It is the color of objects. Physics is in car crashes, looking in the mirror, and falling objects. If you really want to know EVERYTHING I was able to learn in the 6 weeks, go back and read my blog. I posted about 28 blog post about what I did and learned everyday. It was an extremely fun time!

What did I like about the class?
I really liked how it relates to so much around us in everyday life. I liked the unit about lights, especially because I didn't expect it. I really liked the labs. They were really fun and interesting to see the physics in action. Mr. Blake was also a very good teacher. He made the interesting stuff really fun to learn and the more boring parts of physics funny and enjoyable. I remember him pretending to be Darth Varder with the red laser pointer during the light unit. I also thought his semi incredible hulk joke was really funny. Thanks Mr. Blake!

What could be modified about this class?
I think one thing that could be fixed is to not do labs on lab practical day. Labs were really fun and all, but it got hard to focus on the lab practical when I was already went through a lab in the morning. Last it to make sure we have the breaks at 10 so we can have some free time and for 15 minutes so we have time to stand up and relax.

Commentary/Feedback?
 Thanks Mr. Blake for a great class! You made the class a lot more interesting and fun for me. You made the class easy to understand and I hope you enjoy the rest of your summer!

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Unit 10 Blog Post #3

Today in class, we started but just reviewing what reflection was. After a good review, we moved on to refraction. Refraction is the change in wave speed due to change in medium. The dependent for refraction is medium. A law involving refraction is Snell's Law. Snell's law in a basic equation is N1(sinO1)=N2(sinO2). We use this equation when a light shines through an object and bends. N is the index of refraction. N equals speed of light in a vacuum over speed of light in medium. This is written as N=C/V. When we know an angle of the light going in or out. Two rules we learned for when lights go through objects are:

When moving from slow to fast (medium), light will bend away from the normal.
When moving a fast medium to a slow medium, light will bend towards the normal.

After all that, we did a bunch of questions involving the Snell's law equation. Some problems went through regular object and some through triangle glass blocks making it a little more confusing. Mr. Blake then showed us how to do equations involving lens. He told us about how glasses fix the vision of people who are near or far sighted. We then drew light going through lens and where they reach. We learned two rays involved in these lens. The parallel ray is from the object to optic axis, thru lens and bends thru focal point to other side. The optic axis goes thru the center of the lens in our equations and where the object looking through lens is on.The focal point is from the object thru focal point on the object side thru lens, then parallel. The central ray goes from object thru the center of the lens then continues (no bending).


This is a picture of my friend Grant. Grant is far sighted. That mean the light doesn't reach all the way back of his eye like people who have 20-20 vision. The lens of the glasses get the lights to reach the back of his eye so he can see clear.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Unit 10 Blog Post #2

Today in class, we kept reviewing unit 10. Mr. Blake told us that the reason we can see things because of light. For example, Mr. Blake's shirt was red. When the light hits his shirt, it absorbs all the colors except for red. That red not absorbed reflects off his shirt and to our eyes so we can see his red shirt. Mr. Blake talked about the light in our classroom. In the classroom, the lights shine white lights. White lights shine all the colors. Something fun that we learned is why the sky is blue. The sky is blue because the scattering of the blue wavelengths due to the nitrogen in our atmosphere.  Another fun thing we learned was about the color of ocean. Water likes to absorb lower frequency lights like red, but water is actually clear. Since water is clear and absorbs lower frequency lights, the blue and other colors with higher frequencies get shown. The next item we went over was the Law of Reflection. All angles are relative to the normal. In equation form, angle of incidence equals angle of reflection. We talked about different reflections. When the surface the light is reflecting on flat, then the reflection will be a specular reflection. An example of this is reflecting light from a mirror. You can tell it is flat because the if using a laser pointer then reflections leaves a dot of light. If the surface the light is reflecting on is no flat, then the reflection is a diffuse reflection. An example of this is reflecting light from the Punahou white board. When reflecting a laser pointer light off it, the pointer leaves a wider line reflections.
This is a picture of the sky. We learned about how the sky is blue because of the scattering of the blue wavelengths due to the nitrogen in our atmosphere. This is involving the lights that we talked about in class.

Monday, July 15, 2013

Unit 10 Blog Post #1

Today in class, we started by reviewing for a unit 9 test. We did the unit 9 review in the packet and summarized what we learned last week. After the test, we started unit 10. Unit 10 was about light. Light can't be seen unless it gets to your eyes, but there isn't just one type of light. Different types of lights are ultraviolet, X-rays, and gamma rays. In theory, no object can go faster than the speed of light. The speed of light is 299,792,458 meters per second. Mr. Blake made us calculate how far light travels in one earth year. This is called a light year. The answer was 9.47 times 10 to the 15th.


This is a picture of a light in my room. I can see the light in my room because the light reaches my eyes. This light is visible light, if it was infrared or ultra violet. I wouldn't be able to see the light.

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Unit 9 Blog Post #2

In class today we talked talked more about unit 9. The new vocabulary we learned was reflection, refraction, and dispersion. Reflection is the bouncing waves and refraction is the bending of waves. Dispersion is when waves spread out. To show these terms in real life, Mr. Blake drew out ocean waves. He showed how waves can spread out or bend. Another term we went over is natural  frequency, which is the frequency an object wants to vibrate at. An example is when Mr. Blake drops a meter stick, it makes a sound. The sound it makes is based on its size and mass. Sound is its natural frequency. We also talked about Resonance. Resonance is the increase in amplitude of oscillation of an electric or mechanical system exposed to a periodic external force whose frequency is equal to or some multiple of the natural frequency of the system. The big new topic we talked about is sound. Sound is a mechanical wave traveling through a medium. Sound is a longitudinal wave that needs medium to travel. All frequencies of sound travels at the same speed at the same temperature. Solids travels fastest through solids, next liquids, then gases, last it doesn't travel through no medium. We also learned about sound ranges. We talked about how it goes infra sonic to ultra sonic. We can't here that because the human's ear is 20 to 20 hertz.

This is a photo of a surf spot I usually go to. This picture relates to the lesson because we talked about waves. Sometimes in the water there will be times when the waves die down and the water becomes flat. But if you wait a couple minutes, the waves come back. This is like the term dispersion because the waves in the water are spreading out having different times between each wave.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Unit 9 Blog Post #1

Today in class, we talked about unit 9. Unit 9  was about waves. Waves are disturbances through space or matter, accompanied with transfer of energy.  we started by learning a ton of vocabulary.  We talked about parts of waves like the crest and trough. Another term we learned was amplitude. Amplitude is the distance between the peak of the wave and the equilibrium point. We talked about changing the frequency of the wave. Frequency is how many cycles pass in a second. The unit for this is hertz (Hz). Another term we learned is vibration. A vibration is a wiggle in time and space. Mr. Blake told us that waving to people is just vibrating. That was an interesting truth we learned. Mr. Adams also was able to show us this cool example of a wave. We got to see the nodes and the anti-nodes in the wave and identify loops.

This is a picture of a slinky. The slinky in class was to show an example of waves. In a lab, we had to know over certain object with the slinky, but at the same time try to keep other objects up. The slinky is a very good way to show how a wave looks.



Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Final Bottle Rocket Blog Post

     What design features were included in your rocket design?
Our rocket used 2 2 liter bottles, duct tape, plastic bag, string, cardboard, and hot glue. the rocket had 2 bottle back to back in each other having the neck of the bottle on both ends. One end we created at parachute to exit out of and the other is where the water would be held. We had three fins, they were used to keep the bottle steady on the way up. The Fins were hot glued and duck taped. The fins did the job for the most part. The parachute, when it worked and deployed, worked well. The parachute had some problems that could have been fixed if we had more time.


Your launch conditions:
We would usually get to around 60-80 PSI. The higher the PSI, it seemed the higher the rocket would go. We got higher psi's by getting Alex and I to pump at once adding more strength to the pump. The amount of water was about half each time. I observed that a little less than half would be most effective. Too much and the rocket would go too low. 

What has this project taught you? 
I learned about air friction. We learned to make it aerodynamic on the way up to get to the highest point, then a parachute to catch the air and slow down the fall. We learned how the force of gravity really pulls down on the object. We learned about acceleration. When the rocket fell it accelerated towards the ground. When the rocket shot up, the rocket accelerated towards the ground causing the rocket to slow down. I learned about techniques to make the bottle rocket have more air time. From seeing other groups and the websites, I found didn't designs for bottle rockets, fins, and parachutes.

Final Thoughts:
The bottle rocket project was an exciting project. It was fun to get out of the class and see physics in the real life. I wish we had an extra day or two to work on our rocket, but I think our rocket did well for the amount of time and thinking we did. Even thought we didn't make ten seconds (we made 7.1 seconds), we did our best and I was happy with out time. 

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Bottle Rocket Day 1

Our rocket model fell short of the five second requirement we were supposed to fulfill. Our rocket's times were around three to four seconds, close, but not quite the five seconds we needed. For our rocket we used: 2 2liter bottles, duck tape, string, plastic bag, cardboard, and hot glue. We first cut the top off of one of the 2 liter bottles and taped it to the bottom of the bottle. This created a end/ cone to make the rocket more aerodynamic. We launched that for a 4 second launch. We then added three fins. We made a fin with a height on 14 in. and a width of 8 in. We made them out of cardboard and covered them up with duck tape. We then hot glued the fins on the bottle rocket. We finished securing them by taping them on. The goal of the fins was to make the rocket go up straight, but it didn't seem to make a difference. We then added a plastic bag parachute. The design wasn't properly made to be effective. With the parachute, the rocket had a time of three seconds. Alex and I decided that the parachute we had wasn't working so we decided to remove it and try without the parachute. The rocket got a time of three and a half. Just a little better than the time before. I think that a more effective parachute design will be effective to the rockets air time.
This is a picture of the supplies before we taped the fins on and before we taped on the head of he bottle on. 


This is an picture of of our rocket withe the fins and parachute design. The parachute wasn't big enough and didn't come out enough to be effective to our air time.

Monday, July 8, 2013

Unit 8 Blog Post #2

Today in class, we went over more unit 8 topics. Mr. Blake taught us about power. Power is the rate at which something is done. The equation for power is change energy over change in time. This is simplified to work over time. The unit for power is joules over seconds, also called watts (w). We learned that power is directly related to energy and inversely related to time.
In this picture, there is a light bulb on a lamp. Power in light bulbs is measured by kilowatt hours. Mr. Blake told us that "energy companies" should really be called power companies because the companies supply power no energy.

At the end of class, we worked on our bottle rockets. We got to launch our bottle without any attachments. Alex and I launched the rockets three times. The first time we filled it up a little more than half of water. We launched the rocket went for about 1.5 seconds. Our second rocket we had less water and our rocket went up for about 3 seconds. On our third with less water, our rocket went up for just about 5 seconds. Now we have a general idea how much water to add.

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Unit 8 Blog Post #1

For class, we reviewed unit 8 about energy. Energy has magnitude, but no direction making it scalar.We learned about different types of energy. We learned about kinetic, potential, and spring potential energy.

Kinetic Energy is the energy of motion. The equation is  KE= 1/2 x mass x (velocity)2 = 1/2m(v)2. 
Potential Energy is the gravitational energy. The equation is PEg= mass x gravity x change in height = mgh
Spring Potential Energy. PEs= 1/2 x spring constant x (distance the sprig is stretched or compressed)2 = PEs= 1/2k(d)2

We learned that energy is conserved. This is stated in the Law of Conservation of Energy. It says energy cannot be created or destroyed it only changes form.

Of course, we learned about a new graph. The graph we learned was force vs. distance. We learned two rules for it. First, the area under a curve of a force vs. distance graph is work done. Second, the slope of a force vs. distance graph is spring constant. 
This picture is Alex drinking gaterade. Gaterade is a drinking that has cards and electrolytes to give your body energy to work out. This energy times the amount of force he puts into his work out or activity will effect the amount of work he does.

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Egg Drop Write up

1. The physics involved in dropping the egg was the force of gravity, which is 9.8 meters per second. There was the acceleration on gravity when the egg fell from the third floor. There was going to be a sudden stop of momentum at the end. When falling there was friction in the air, which reduced the velocity of our system during the fall. Air friction depends on surface area and wind. Our egg wouldn't break because the 3 layers of padding was able to cushion the impact. We also had air between the layers in zip lock bags to increase the impact time. Increasing the impact time helps relieve the impact and do less damage to the egg.

2. When our capsule and egg made impact with the ground, many forces acted upon it. The force of gravity made it accelerate to the ground and make impact. The force of the ground during impact which was the cause of damage. The egg felt less force because the layers and air inside the capsule was able to increase the impact time and decrease the force put on the egg.

3. Our egg was able to survive. There were no cracks in our egg and it stayed healthy. Our designed was successful because we made it to increase impact time. Our capsule had a large surface area so it would be slightly slower because of air friction. Also, in the layer of zip lock bags, we kept air in to be released on impact to increase the impact time. The last design we did to help keep the egg in tact was wrapping the egg and bags in shirts. The shirts would have a little bit of air inside. When it would make impact with the ground, the air would increase the impact time. All these designs increasing the impact time helped keep our egg from breaking.


                                                                         Before:


After:


Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Unit 7 Blog Post #7

Today in the second day of unit 7, we reviewed momentum. We turned in our lab activity we did yesterday. Mr. Blake went over it answering questions about the lab activity. We did a physics momentum worksheet. We had to find the momentum of 2 bumper cars before and after they collide. The bumper cars collided in different ways, similar to the collisions in our lab activity yesterday. We then did a lab practical. The lab practical was similar to the lab activity we did yesterday. We got the carts lined up and attached them to each other by the pins. We then got a dart gun and shot sail on top of the cart. This  pushed the cart forward through the photogate. We did that five times and found the average. Right before lunch, we did a water balloon activity. Sparks and I gently threw a water ballon to each other slowly getting farther away. After lunch, we reviewed more momentum problems preparing for the test we have tomorrow. Then we got together with our group to discuss our egg project.
In this picture, Gio, Sparks, and I are doing our lab practical. The momentum of the bullet pushed the carts to pass through the photogate. 


Monday, July 1, 2013

Unit 7 Blog post #1

Today, the first day of the 2nd semester, we talked about unit 7. Unit 7 is about momentum. Momentum is mass times velocity. We use a type of P for the symbol of momentum. The unit for momentum is kilograms meters per second. Momentum is also a vector quantity. An important law we learned for momentum is the Law of Conservation of P. The law states "In a closed system, momentum of a system is always conserved." Momentum is also in force. Force equals change in momentum over change in time or change in momentum equals average force times change in time. Change in time times average force also equals impulse. Impulse is something that changes the momentum in an object.
This is a picture of Jacob, Gio and I working on our lab activity. This lab we tested the momentum of objects when they collided with each other. 

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Semester Review/Reflection

This semester, we went over units 1-6. As the units progressed, they became more difficult. We started off reviewing scientific notations, conversations, and graphs. We moved on to kinematics, we learned about scalars, vectors, and new graphs. We learned about free fall movement and more graphs. We did equations for falling objects. Then we moved to equations with displacements and Newton's three laws.

Physics so far has been a very enjoyable class. Mr. Blake, you are a very good teacher and you do a very good job teaching us the subject while making it fun and exciting. Physics is also a very interesting class. I enjoy way more than chemistry. The math in physics is more difficult than the start of year.

Some challenges I had were memorizing equations. I had to take some extra time for memorizing the mathematical equations for the test. The unit 5 and 6 have some difficult math equations to memorize. They have a lot of steps to find the answer.

Thanks for a great year in physics!

This was a fun 3 weeks. Here is the lab we did trying to remove friction from the cart. Gio is doing his part to help collect data.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Unit 6 Blog Post

Unit 6 so far has been very similar to unit 5. We are doing the same type of problems involving force diagrams. We are now more closely focusing on problems that have rope tension. We have to find the tension of the rope using fnet equations. A new type of situation that problems have set up are elevators. They will tell you about a person inside and change the acceleration of an elevator downwards or upwards and make you find the force the floor of the elevator exerts on a person inside. We also talked more about Newton's second and third law. Mr. Blake went more in depth on newton's third law, he talked about how when an object hits or touches another object, that other objects touched the original object with the same force in the opposite direction.
In this picture, my friend Jake just fell down the stairs. When his butt hit the stairs, the stairs returned the same amount of force but in the opposite direction. Sucks for Jake.

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Unit 5 Blog Post #2

In class today, we learned about Newton's second and third laws. His second law is "The acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the net force of an object while the acceleration of an object is inversely proportional to an object's mass. Newton's third law is For every force, there is an equal and opposite force. Equal in magnitude opposite in direction. Mr. Blake gave us a good example by poking Gio. When Mr. Blake touched Gio, Gio was also touching Mr. Blake according to Newton's third law. For unit 5, we also reviewed more displacement problems using trig. Mr. Blake showed us force diagrams where we would have to draw the weight and any tensions and etc to solve our problem. We also reviewed more on friction. Friction, or friction force, is a force that opposes motion or impeding motion.

In this picture, Gio is trying his very hardest to go down the slip n slide. Sadly for him, there is friction stopping him from smoothly gliding him down the tarp. We were able to help him out by adding water and soap to give riders smooth glide. 

Monday, June 24, 2013

Unit 5 Blog Post

For unit 5, we talked about vectors and scalars again. We talked about real life examples like number of passengers in a plane and displacement of a flight and said if they were scalars or vectors. We went over what a force and a normal force is. A force is a push or pull and a normal force is supporting force that is perpendicular to the surface the object is on. We talked about how to find the displacement of two connect lines. We learned how to use some trig for it. Some trig we learned is SIN, COS, and TAN.
TAN is opposite over adjacent.
SIN is opposite over hypotenuse.
COS is adjacent over hypotenuse.
When using the trig, we use a method to find the displacement. First, we use bureku, which is where we break all the diagonals into X and Y. Second, we add all the values together to get the sum of the resultants. (axes still independent). Third, we use ukerub, which we take x and y sums and create a new vector. The last thing we learned in class is Newton's first law. The law is "An object in motion will tend to stay in motion unless acted upon by an outside unbalanced force."  Or "An object at rest will tend to stay at rest unless acted upon by an outside unbalanced force."
In this picture, are my two little brothers. Like usual, they are basically doing nothing. They are at rest and like Newton's first law states, an object (or objects) at rest will tend to stay at rest unless acted upon by an outside unbalanced force. My brother would rest all day, but my mom (an outside force) will come and yell at them for sitting around too much and they will have to do outside and move around.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Unit 4 Picture #2

On friday, we did a lot of review and activities. The review was talking about equations on objects rolling off an object and falling. In my picture, the pingpong ball is rolling off the table and about to accelerate to the ground. We use DAT equation and find the time it takes and the distance from the table where it will land. 
For our activity, we launched rockets with different amounts of power and timed how long it would take to come back and hit the ground. We had low, medium, high, and super. After collecting the data, we calculated where Mr. Blake should stand so we could hit him with our rockets. Sadly, no one was successful. The picture is of a group testing a rocket and it is plummeting down.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Unit 4 Picture

In class today, we started unit 4. The topic for unit 4 was projectiles. We talked about objects falling and moving at the same time. Two rules about this is the vegas rules of physics:
What stays on the X-axis, stays on the X-axis.
What stays on the Y-axis, stays on the Y-axis.
This is talking about when we write down our given. We have separate columns for the X-axis and the Y-axis so we don't mix up our data. The X-axis is for the horizontal movement of the object and the Y-axis is for the vertical movement of the object. We used the equations from unit 3, but added in y's and x's to differentiate what axis the equation is aiming to solve.

This is a picture of bird droppings. When birds make droppings in the sky, their droppings are projectiles. They are only powered by gravity and they come plopping down on whatever is below. When the droppings are released, they don't only fall, they also maintain the speed of the bird and slowly accelerate in the opposite direction until they are no longer accelerating on the x-axis. They just plummet to the ground below.

^Not my picture.
http://www.albanyrock.com/page.php?page_id=86

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Unit 1-3 Summary

In unit 1, we learned about accuracy and precision. Accuracy is nearness of a measurement to the standard or true value. Precision several measurements provide an answer very close to each other. We got to use pendulums. We learned that the time it takes for one complete cycle to occur on a pendulum is cycle. We had to use independent variables (variable that changes the dependent variable) and the dependent variable (dependent on the independent variable).

In unit 2, we went over kinematics. Kinematics is the study of motion. The important question about motion was "Relative to what?" When someone says something is moving, it is moving relative to them, but to the car the person looking at the car seems to be moving back. Movement is relative to who is viewing the movement. We learned scalar and vector. A scalar is a quantity that has magnitude. Magnitude is best described as muchness of something. A vector is a quantity that has direction and magnitude. For vectors, we talked about displacement. Displacement is the amount of distance from the starting point. We next talked about graphes. We learned potion vs. time graph and velocity vs time graph. We reviewed three important rules:
1. Th slope of a potion vs. time graph is velocity.
2. The slope of a velocity vs. time graph is acceleration.
3. The area under the "curve" of a velocity vs. time graph is distance travelled.
Acceleration is a change of velocity per unit of time.

In this picture, I am flying in a plane. People who look up see I am moving fast. For me, it looks like they are moving backwards. It is all relative to who is looking at what.


In unit 3, we learned about acceleration. We learned about an acceleration vs. time graph. We also learned three equations to help solve for missing variable like time, distance, speed, and acceleration. There equations are:
Equations:                  A.K.A
D= 1/2at^2 + v0t        (d,a,t)
V= Vo + at                  (v,a,t)
V^2= Vo^2 + 2ad       (v,a,d)
We also talked about when you throw an item in the air, it has different speed. The object starts fast and slowly accelerates in the opposite direction. At a certain point in the air, it will stop for a second and start to accelerate downward. Then eventually gain a lot of speed.

This was a brief summary on what we have learned in the last three units. 

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Extra Credit Teaching Parents



This is a video of my teaching my dad a small part of the kinematics (unit 2). I talked about motion be relative. I talked about scalars and vectors with examples to show what I was talking about. I also gave an example of displacement.

Unit 3 Picture 2

In unit 3, we learned about acceleration. Acceleration is change in velocity over time. In short, it is meter over seconds squared. For the unit, we had to know 3 crucial equations:

Equations:                  A.K.A
D= 1/2at^2 + v0t        (d,a,t)
V= Vo + at                  (v,a,t)

V^2= Vo^2 + 2ad       (v,a,d)

These equations help us solve for missing information in problems like distance, acceleration, and velocity. Each equation has a purpose to help solve for one of the three missing info. Mr. Blake showed us an effective format to solve problems that involve missing information. We start by writing down the question we are aiming to solve first. Second, we write down all our given information to help us remember what we know, then after, we make a sketch of what the problem is describing. Next we choose an equation that solves for the missing variable and the question at hand. Next we "plug and chug", which is plugging in the given information into the correct equation. Finally we box our answer and go back to check our work.


In class today, we learned about falling objects and how they constantly accelerate. An example we used in class was two falling balls. Even if the balls are different in size and weight, they still fall at the rate (which is 9.8 meters per second squared) due to gravity's pull. In the picture, I am dropping a lacrosse ball and a basketball. As you can see, they are falling at the same rate.

In class we also learned about objects being thrown up and coming back down. We went over how the object on the way up starts fast, then looses speed and goes slow. At a certain point, the object stops and slowly goes down. Eventually it speeds down back to the ground/hand. We learned that the object slowing down when going up is the object starting to accelerate downwards. 

Monday, June 17, 2013

Unit 3 Uniform Acceleration

In class today, we went over acceleration. Acceleration is change is velocity over time or meters of seconds squared. We also learned three important equations: 
d=1/2at^2
V=Vo+at
V^2=Vo^2+2ad
These equations are used for different problems involving acceleration. These equations are also known as Dat, Vat, and Vad. Each equation is used for different problem depending on what you are looking for.
In this picture, I am riding on a skateboard down my driveway. My drive way is slanted letting me roll down. In class we rode down the small slope in front of Bingum Hall to show acceleration. Like when rolling down the slope at Bingum, my driveway lets me accelerate downwards.


Sunday, June 16, 2013

Unit 2 Picture

On friday in class, we went over different graphs (potion vs time and velocity vs. time) and how they relate. A really important part of the graphs are rules. The two rules we learned are:
1. The slope of a velocity vs. time graph is acceleration.
2. The area under the "curve"of a velocity vs time graph is distance travelled.
We also went over displacement in more details. We learned that when you move a certain distance, there has to be a direction to make it a displacement, but that distance is relative to the starting point. This picture is of the kinematics worksheet we did for class to review for the test on monday.

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Unit 2 Picture


In class, we learned about velocity. Velocity is distance over time. We found out that speed and velocity are two different things. Velocity is the rate of change from a position of an object. Speed is amount distance covered in a certain amount of time. We also learned about kinematics, which is the study of motion. We were informed that motion is relative. The picture is of the Punahou track. This was during a track and field event. When the runners are sprinting next to each other, to each other they look like they are not moving. On the other hand to a viewer, the runners are moving really fast.

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Unit 1 Picture


This picture is of me doing the review packet for unit 1. The past two days, we learned about different graph shapes and the algebraic representation for each graph. We went over scientific notations, which was a review from chemistry. We also learned dimensional analysis, which is an organized way to convert. In the review section we learned how to pull information from a graph. We had to find units for the slope, average price of an item, and the mathematical equation that states the relationship described by the graph. In the picture I'm doing the packet page 1 of the review and starting number 2 to study for our physics test tomorrow.

Introduction

Hi, I'm Devon. I'm a lacrosse player and a tennis player. I like lacrosse because it's the best combination on contact and skill found in a sport. I played the viola for Punahou last year. I used to play the violin, but I switched to viola. I was born in New Jersey and moved to Hawaii in the 5th grade. I took biology in freshmen year and chemistry honors in sophomore year. Chemistry honors was very challenging for me. I am taking trig next year. I hope to learn what physics is about and to see if I have an interest in physics.

This is a picture of me shows my silliness and fun personality. I enjoy fooling around, but being serious when I'm required to. I am excited to be in physics.