4
$\begingroup$

I'm reading Stewart's Essential Calculus:

EXAMPLE 1 Suppose that a ball is dropped from the upper observation deck of the CN Tower in Toronto, 450 m above the ground. Find the velocity of the ball after 5 seconds.

SOLUTION Through experiments carried out four centuries ago, Galileo discovered that the distance fallen by any freely falling body is proportional to the square of the time it has been falling. (This model for free fall neglects air resistance.) If the distance fallen after seconds is denoted by and measured in meters, then Galileo’s law is expressed by the equation

$s(t)= 4.9t^2$

The difficulty in finding the velocity after 5 s is that we are dealing with a single instant of time $(t=5)$ , so no time interval is involved. However, we can approximate the desired quantity by computing the average velocity over the brief time interval of a tenth of a second from $t=5$ to $t=5.1$:

What he meant with difficulty here?

2 Answers 2

5

He means that whereas it's easy to define the average velocity over a period (as displacement divided by time), it's much harder to define instantaneous velocity. So instead of thinking initially about an instantaneous velocity, he considers the average velocity over a very short period of time.

5

Average velocity has clear physical content: it is change in displacement divided by elapsed time. Instantaneous velocity is more of a theoretical construct: there is no clear way that such a thing could be measured.

  • 1
    Here, $s(t)$ stands for displacement (that is, the distance fallen), not velocity or speed.2012-09-30