Distance

Revision as of 07:05, 23 May 2025 by Thakshashila (talk | contribs) (Created page with "= Distance: Definition and Mathematical Representation = == Introduction == '''Distance''' is a basic concept in kinematics and everyday measurements. It refers to the total length of the path traveled by an object during motion. Distance is a '''scalar quantity''', meaning it has magnitude but no direction. It is always a non-negative value and differs from '''displacement''', which is a vector. == Definition == Mathematically, distance is represented as the total p...")
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Distance: Definition and Mathematical Representation edit

Introduction edit

Distance is a basic concept in kinematics and everyday measurements. It refers to the total length of the path traveled by an object during motion. Distance is a scalar quantity, meaning it has magnitude but no direction.

It is always a non-negative value and differs from displacement, which is a vector.

Definition edit

Mathematically, distance is represented as the total path length covered by an object:

d=t1t2|v(t)|dt

Where:

  • d is the distance traveled,
  • v(t) is the velocity as a function of time,
  • t1 and t2 are the initial and final times.

For motion with constant speed:

d=vt

Where:

  • v is the speed,
  • t is the time duration.

SI Unit edit

The SI unit of distance is the meter (m):

1m=100cm=1000mm

Characteristics edit

  • Scalar quantity: Only magnitude, no direction.
  • Always positive or zero.
  • Depends on the path taken, not just start and end points.
  • Greater than or equal to the magnitude of displacement.

Distance vs. Displacement edit

  • Distance measures the actual path length.
  • Displacement is the straight-line change in position (a vector).

Example: If you walk 3 m east and then 4 m west, the total distance is:

d=3m+4m=7m

But the displacement is:

Δx=3m4m=1m

Graphical Interpretation edit

  • The area under a speed–time graph gives the total distance traveled.
  • The slope of a distance–time graph gives the instantaneous speed.

Applications edit

  • Measuring how far a vehicle or person has traveled.
  • Navigation and GPS tracking.
  • Road transportation and logistics.
  • Sports and fitness tracking.

See Also edit