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Reference frames and relative motion

Velocity is a measurement, not a property of an object. Switch observers and the number you write down changes. The arithmetic that connects observers is short, signed, and (in this course) one-dimensional.

Previously: signed velocity from Topic 1.1, and average velocity and acceleration from Topic 1.2. Both carry over without modification.

§1

What a reference frame actually is.

A reference frame is the perspective of an observer. It is fixed to that observer and travels with them. A passenger on a train carries the train frame around. A person standing on the platform carries the ground frame. Both observers are equally entitled to measure the world, and both will get correct answers, even when those answers disagree.

What changes between frames is what counts as "at rest." A coffee cup on a tray table is at rest in the train frame, but moving in the ground frame. The platform sign is at rest in the ground frame, but moving in the train frame. Neither observer is wrong. They are answering different questions because they are different observers.

This is the central idea of the topic: velocity is a measurement, and a measurement requires an observer. Whenever a problem hands you a velocity, the unspoken question is "in whose frame?"

GROUND FRAME (OBSERVER ON PLATFORM) TRAIN FRAME (PASSENGER INSIDE) v = +12 m/s v = -12 m/s train at rest in this frame
Fig. 1.4.1 The same train, platform, and pole, drawn from two reference frames. Take east as $+x$. Left: the ground observer measures the train at $+12$ m/s, with the pole and themselves at rest. Right: the train passenger measures the train at rest, with the pole and ground drifting at $-12$ m/s (12 m/s west). Same scene, two correct answers.
§2

A 3-step procedure for relative velocity.

The procedure below works for every 1D relative-velocity problem in this course. The steps don't change; only the numbers do.

  1. Pick a positive direction. Usually east is $+x$, or "to the right is positive." Write it down. A coordinate system you didn't write down is a coordinate system you'll forget halfway through.
  2. Write each velocity as a signed number, naming whose frame it's in. "$15$ m/s west" becomes $-15$ m/s in the ground frame. The sign is the direction; the words "east" and "west" are translations of $+$ and $-$ once an axis is fixed.
  3. Apply the chain rule: $\vec{v}_{AC} = \vec{v}_{AB} + \vec{v}_{BC}$. Read $\vec{v}_{AB}$ as "velocity of A as measured by B." The inner subscripts cancel like fractions: the inner $B$'s on the right combine to give $AC$ on the left. Need the inverse? $\vec{v}_{BA} = -\vec{v}_{AB}$. Swap observer and object, the sign flips.

Step 3 is where the work happens, but step 1 is where most students lose points. If you sign your velocities before doing arithmetic, the chain rule does the rest.

§3

The frames you'll meet.

Names, identities, and conventions that show up in §4, §5, and on the AP exam. Use this as a quick lookup.

Ground frame
An observer standing on the ground. The default frame in most problems. By convention, $+x$ points east (or "to the right").
Vehicle frame
An observer riding in a moving train, car, or walkway. "At rest in this frame" means at rest with respect to the vehicle, not the ground.
$\vec{v}_{AB}$
Velocity of object A as measured by observer B. The first letter is what's moving; the second is who's watching. Read aloud: "v of A relative to B."
$\vec{v}_{AC} = \vec{v}_{AB} + \vec{v}_{BC}$
The chain rule. Velocity of A in C's frame = velocity of A in B's frame, plus velocity of B in C's frame. Inner subscripts (the $B$'s) match and effectively cancel.
$\vec{v}_{BA} = -\vec{v}_{AB}$
Observer-swap rule. Whatever B looks like to A, A looks like the opposite to B. Same magnitude, flipped sign.
Inertial frame
A frame moving at constant velocity (no acceleration) relative to a known inertial frame. AP Physics 1 assumes inertial frames unless a problem says otherwise.
$\vec{a}$ is invariant
Acceleration has the same value in any inertial frame. Different observers will disagree about velocity, but they will always agree about acceleration.
$\Delta v$ is invariant
A change in velocity is the same in any inertial frame. Subtracting a constant frame velocity from both $v_0$ and $v_f$ leaves $\Delta v = v_f - v_0$ unchanged. This is why $\vec{a}$ is invariant.
§4

Worked example: walker on a moving train.

A train moves at $12$ m/s east in the ground frame. A passenger walks toward the front of the train at $1$ m/s relative to the train. Find the passenger's velocity in the ground frame, then find the platform's velocity as measured from the train.

SCENE (GROUND FRAME) +1 m/s (in train) +12 m/s (train in ground) NUMBER LINE: PASSENGER IN GROUND FRAME 0 1 12 13 +1 +12 +13 m/s (passenger in ground)
Fig. 1.4.2 The passenger's velocity in the ground frame is the head-to-tail sum of "passenger in train" and "train in ground." On the number line, $+1$ followed by $+12$ lands at $+13$.
Step 1: pick a positive direction

East is $+x$. So "12 m/s east" means $v = +12$ m/s.

Step 2: write each velocity, signed, with its frame

Use P for passenger, T for train, G for ground.

$$\vec{v}_{PT} = +1\ \text{m/s}, \quad \vec{v}_{TG} = +12\ \text{m/s}$$

Step 3: apply the chain rule

Question 1: passenger in the ground frame. $$\vec{v}_{PG} = \vec{v}_{PT} + \vec{v}_{TG} = (+1) + (+12) = +13\ \text{m/s}$$ The passenger moves $13$ m/s east in the ground frame.

Question 2: platform (the ground itself) in the train frame. Use the observer-swap rule, since "the platform in the train frame" is the same as "the ground in the train frame," and the ground in the train frame is the negative of the train in the ground frame. $$\vec{v}_{GT} = -\vec{v}_{TG} = -(+12) = -12\ \text{m/s}$$ The platform appears to drift at $12$ m/s west when seen from the train.

Notice that the passenger walking forward at $1$ m/s in the train frame was the easy number, and the chain rule made it the easy number in the ground frame too. The hard step is signing the velocities; the arithmetic is just addition.

§5

Worked example: acceleration is the same in both frames.

A car decelerates uniformly from $20$ m/s east to $10$ m/s east over $5$ seconds, all measured in the ground frame. A van moves at constant $8$ m/s east, also in the ground frame, and watches the car during the same five seconds. Find the car's acceleration in both frames and compare.

Step 1: pick a positive direction, name the frames

East is $+x$. Use C for the car, V for the van, G for the ground.

Step 2: acceleration in the ground frame

$$\vec{a}_{CG} = \dfrac{\Delta v_{CG}}{\Delta t} = \dfrac{(+10) - (+20)}{5} = \dfrac{-10}{5} = -2\ \text{m/s}^2$$ The car accelerates at $2$ m/s² west in the ground frame. (The minus sign means the velocity is changing toward $-x$. The car is slowing while still moving east.)

Step 3: convert each instant into the van frame, then compute

The chain rule says $\vec{v}_{CV} = \vec{v}_{CG} - \vec{v}_{VG}$ (object minus observer, in the ground frame). Apply it at start and at end: $$v_{CV}(\text{start}) = (+20) - (+8) = +12\ \text{m/s}$$ $$v_{CV}(\text{end})\;\;\, = (+10) - (+8) = +2\ \text{m/s}$$ Then the acceleration in the van frame: $$\vec{a}_{CV} = \dfrac{(+2) - (+12)}{5} = \dfrac{-10}{5} = -2\ \text{m/s}^2$$

Step 4: compare

$\vec{a}_{CG} = \vec{a}_{CV} = -2$ m/s². The two observers measure different velocities at every instant, but they measure the same acceleration. Both will write the same Newton's second law for the car. Both will infer the same net force.

The reason for the agreement is in step 3. Subtracting the same constant ($v_{VG} = +8$) from both $v_0$ and $v_f$ leaves $\Delta v$ unchanged: $(v_f - 8) - (v_0 - 8) = v_f - v_0$. The constant cancels. Since $\vec{a} = \Delta \vec{v} / \Delta t$ and $\Delta t$ is also the same in both frames, $\vec{a}$ has to be the same too. This is why physics looks the same in any inertial frame, and why the choice of which frame to work in is a matter of convenience, not correctness.

§6

3 mistakes that cost real points.

Each of these mistakes shows up reliably on the AP exam, in homework, and in graded labs. Each has a clear pattern: spot the shape of the wrong thinking, and you stop falling for it.

Pitfall · 01

"The ball moves at $5$ m/s." (No observer, no answer.)

This is the central error of Topic 1.4. A problem says a ball, a runner, a train moves at some speed, and a student writes that number down as if it were a property of the object, like its mass. It is not. Velocity is a measurement, and a measurement requires an observer. The statement "the ball moves at $5$ m/s" is incomplete in the same way that "$x = 4$" without a coordinate system is incomplete. The number is correct only inside a frame, and silently changing frames mid-problem is how you get answers that disagree with the answer key by exactly the velocity of some vehicle in the problem.

Fix. Before writing any velocity number, name the observer. Use subscripts: $\vec{v}_{PT}$ for "passenger in train," $\vec{v}_{TG}$ for "train in ground." If the subscripts on both sides of an equation don't follow the chain-rule pattern (inner letters matching), the equation is wrong and the answer will be wrong with it.

Pitfall · 02

"$20$ minus $15$ equals $5$." (Forgetting that one of them is negative.)

Two cars are headed toward each other. One moves at $20$ m/s east, the other at $15$ m/s west. A student wants the velocity of car A as measured from car B, plugs into a half-remembered formula, and writes "$20 - 15 = 5$." But "$15$ west" in the ground frame is $-15$ m/s, not $+15$ m/s. The chain rule says $v_{AB} = v_{AG} - v_{BG} = (+20) - (-15) = +35$. The two minus signs combine into a plus. The student's $5$ m/s is off by exactly the magnitude of the velocity they didn't sign.

Fix. Before doing arithmetic, write each velocity as a signed number with a positive direction stated on the page. "East is $+x$, so $v_{BG} = -15$ m/s." Then plug in. The minus signs are not optional, and they are not decorative; they are the direction.

Pitfall · 03

"Same speed, so what's there to flip?"

A train moves at $20$ m/s east in the ground frame. A passenger looks out the window at a stationary pole and is asked for the pole's velocity in the train frame. The wrong instinct is "well, the magnitude is $20$, the directions are the same straight line, so the answer is $20$ east." But the observer-swap rule says $\vec{v}_{GT} = -\vec{v}_{TG}$. The pole, which is at rest in the ground frame, drifts at $20$ m/s west in the train frame. Magnitude carries over; direction does not. Treating the sign as decorative (the way speed treats it as absent) is the same shape of mistake as Pitfall 02, surfacing on a different facet.

§7

Skill Check.

Ten scenarios, in order. Pick from the chips and press Check my answer. The page remembers your work between visits.

0 OF 10 SCENARIOS COMPLETE

Walker on a moving train.

A train moves at $12$ m/s east in the ground frame. A passenger walks toward the front of the train at $1$ m/s relative to the train. What is the passenger's velocity in the ground frame? Take east as $+x$.

SCENE (GROUND FRAME) +1 m/s (in train) +12 m/s (train in ground) passenger's velocity in ground frame = ?
Magnitude
Direction

Two cars approaching head-on.

On a straight east-west road, car A moves at $20$ m/s east in the ground frame. Car B moves at $15$ m/s west in the ground frame, headed toward A. What is A's velocity as measured from car B? Take east as $+x$.

SCENE (GROUND FRAME) A +20 m/s B -15 m/s measure A's velocity from inside B
Magnitude
Direction

Pole as seen from the train.

A wooden pole stands beside the track, fixed to the ground. A train moves at $20$ m/s east in the ground frame. A passenger looks out the window at the pole. What velocity does the passenger measure for the pole? Take east as $+x$.

SCENE (GROUND FRAME) POLE at rest in ground PASSENGER +20 m/s (train in ground) pole's velocity in train frame = ?
Magnitude
Direction

Side by side at the same speed.

Car A and car B both move at $5$ m/s east in the ground frame. They drive side by side on parallel lanes. What is car B's velocity as measured from car A?

SCENE (GROUND FRAME) A +5 m/s B +5 m/s v in ground = same for both

Walking against a moving walkway.

An airport walkway moves east at $3$ m/s in the ground frame. A passenger walks west on the belt at $2$ m/s relative to the walkway (against the belt's motion). What is the passenger's velocity in the ground frame? Take east as $+x$.

SCENE (GROUND FRAME) WALKWAY (BELT) +3 m/s (belt in ground) -2 m/s (in belt frame) passenger's velocity in ground frame = ?
Magnitude
Direction

A coin dropped on a moving train.

A train moves at constant $30$ m/s east in the ground frame. A passenger releases a coin from rest relative to the train. Use $g = 9.8$ m/s$^2$. What is the coin's acceleration in the ground frame, the moment after release?

SCENE (GROUND FRAME) +30 m/s (constant) coin (just released) a = ?
Magnitude
Direction

Same car, two observers.

In the ground frame, a car has acceleration $2$ m/s$^2$ east. A van moves at constant $8$ m/s east in the ground frame, passing the car during the same interval. What does the van's driver measure for the car's acceleration?

Sign-careful chain rule.

Observer A is on the ground. Observer B moves at $-4$ m/s in A's frame (i.e., $4$ m/s west of A). A box has velocity $+6$ m/s in B's frame (i.e., $6$ m/s east of B). Take east as $+x$. What is the box's velocity in A's frame?

Observer-swap rule, symbolic.

Observer B measures observer A as moving with velocity $\vec{v}_{AB} = +u$, where $u > 0$ (so A moves in the $+x$ direction in B's frame). What does observer A measure for B's velocity, $\vec{v}_{BA}$?

Three-frame chain rule, symbolic.

Observers A, B, and C are each in their own inertial frames. You are given $\vec{v}_{BA}$ (the velocity of B as measured from A) and $\vec{v}_{CB}$ (the velocity of C as measured from B). Which expression correctly gives $\vec{v}_{CA}$, the velocity of C as measured from A?