The arc of a basketball, the orbit of a satellite, a bicycle rounding a curve, a swimmer diving into a pool, blood gushing out of a wound, and a puppy chasing its tail are but a few examples of motions along curved paths. In fact, most motions in nature follow curved paths rather than straight lines. Motion along a curved path on a flat surface or a plane (such as that of a ball on a pool table or a skater on an ice rink) is two-dimensional, and thus described by two-dimensional kinematics. Motion not confined to a plane, such as a car following a winding mountain road, is described by three-dimensional kinematics. Both two- and three-dimensional kinematics are simple extensions of the one-dimensional kinematics developed for straight-line motion in the previous chapter. This simple extension will allow us to apply physics to many more situations, and it will also yield unexpected insights about nature.
Candela Citations
- College Physics. Authored by: OpenStax College. Located at: http://cnx.org/contents/Ax2o07Ul@9.4:8wmg-WP7@3/Introduction-to-Two-Dimensiona. License: CC BY: Attribution. License Terms: Download for free at http://cnx.org/contents/031da8d3-b525-429c-80cf-6c8ed997733a@9.4.