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summer_2018:pcubed_intro_project [2018/06/18 12:42]
danny created
summer_2018:pcubed_intro_project [2018/06/18 13:08]
tallpaul
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 ====== Project 2: Escape from Ice Station McMurdo ====== ====== Project 2: Escape from Ice Station McMurdo ======
  
-===== Parts and B: backstory from previous class period (not computational) ​=====+===== Part A =====
  
-(Skip ahead to Part C for the computational portion of the projectWhat follows is simply the project'​s storyline.)+{{ hovercrafts.jpg |}}
  
-You are a member of a scientific research team at McMurdo ice station which is funded by the Carver Media Group in Antarctica. For reasons undisclosed,​ several inhabitants of the ice station have disappeared. Frightened, a member of your team decides to flee the station on a fan powered hovercraft but you receive a distress call not long after their escape that their steering and acceleration controls have been jammed and they need your help.+You are a member of a scientific research team at McMurdo ice station which is funded by the Carver Media Group in Antarctica.
  
-You decide to attempt a rescue in another hovercraft. You need to tell the runaway researcher when to jump onto your hovercraft. Just as you are about to radio the time to jump to the runaway researcher, you realize the steering and acceleration controls ​have become frozen on your hovercraft and so it continues to accelerate and you cannot change direction. $200$ meters ahead of the point at which you were going to tell the researcher to jump is an ice ravineAt the bottom ​of the ice ravine, $400$ meters below, is an unfrozen salt water pool surrounded by stalagmitesFrom the ravine'​s edge to the pool is $490$ meters and the pool stretches for $900$ meters. You are moving too quickly to survive jumping off the hovercraftbut might survive the fall into the pool by staying on the hovercraft -- it has seat belts. You now have choice to make: stay on your hovercraft or jump to the runaway researcher'​s ​hovercraft. One or both may make it to the pool. Your choice may be the difference between life and death.+Two members of your research team have recently returned from investigating an incident ​at a Norwegian research facility. They brought with them a burnt humanoid body with two facesSince the disturbing discovery several inhabitants ​of the ice station have disappearedFrightened, a member of your team decided ​to flee the station on a fan powered ​hovercraft ​but you receive a distress call not long after their escape that their steering ​and acceleration controls have been jammed and they need your help.
  
-{{ hovercraft.jpg |}}+<WRAP column 40%> 
 +^ Time ^ Your Team Member'​s Position ^ Your Position ^ 
 +| 0 s | 2536.40 m | 10.47 m | 
 +| 10 s | 3072.80 m | 41.88 m | 
 +| 20 s | 3609.20 m | 94.22 m |  
 +</​WRAP>​ 
 + 
 +<WRAP column 55%> 
 +You decide to attempt a rescue in another hovercraft. You must decide how many members of your team help in the rescue operation. The hovercrafts do not have a velocity or acceleration gauge but they do have GPS locators and you possess your trusty stop watch. The GPS locator tells you the exact position of both your craft and other team members craft relative to the ice station. You are following their path. You collect the following data for the first 20 seconds of your journey. 
 +</​WRAP>​ 
 + 
 +You need to tell the runaway researcher the exact time from your starting time to jump onto your hovercraft as you may only have one shot at this rescue. 
 + 
 +<WRAP info> 
 + 
 +==== Project 2: Learning goals ==== 
 + 
 +  * Predict the motion of a single-particle system executing constant velocity or constant acceleration motion using appropriate representations (this includes verbal, graphical, diagrammatic,​ mathematical,​ and computational representations). 
 +  * Collect, analyze, and evaluate data to determine the type of motion and the properties of the motion of a single-particle system. 
 +  * Evaluate the applicability/​limitations of models and the validity of predictions for different types of motion. 
 +  * Apply the momentum principle ($\Delta\vec{p}=\vec{F}\,\Delta t$; $d\vec{p}=\vec{F}\,​dt$) iteratively/​computationally to predict the motion or determine the properties of motion/net force acting on a single-particle system where the net force is not constant (e.g., due to spring-like restoring forces or dissipative drag forces). 
 + 
 +</​WRAP>​ 
 + 
 +===== Part B ===== 
 + 
 +{{ hovercraft_part2a.jpg |}} 
 + 
 +Just as you are about to radio the time to jump to the runaway researcher, you realize the steering and acceleration controls have become frozen on your hovercraft ​and so it continues to accelerate and you cannot change direction. 200m ahead of the point at which you were going to tell the researcher to jump is an ice ravine. At the bottom of the ice ravine, 400m below, is an unfrozen salt water pool surrounded by stalagmites. From the ravine'​s edge to the pool is 490m and the pool stretches for 900m. You are moving too quickly to survive jumping off the hovercraft, but might survive the fall into the pool by staying on the hovercraft; it has seat belts. You now have a choice to make, to stay on your hovercraft or jump to the runaway researcher'​s hovercraft. One or both may make it to the pool. Your choice may be the difference between life and death. 
 + 
 +{{ hovercraft_part2b.jpg |}}
  
-===== Part C: computational modeling of the trajectories of the hovercrafts ​=====+===== Part C =====
  
 Surprisingly enough hovercrafts are an expensive piece of kit. Your employer, the Carver Media Group, is concerned by the happenings at the McMurdo ice station and would like you to produce an accident report detailing the events after you lost control of your hovercraft. ​ The accident report should include a detailed computational model that provides the projected motion of the runaway hovercraft. Surprisingly enough hovercrafts are an expensive piece of kit. Your employer, the Carver Media Group, is concerned by the happenings at the McMurdo ice station and would like you to produce an accident report detailing the events after you lost control of your hovercraft. ​ The accident report should include a detailed computational model that provides the projected motion of the runaway hovercraft.
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     t = t + dt     t = t + dt
 </​code>​ </​code>​
- 
-<WRAP info> 
- 
-==== Project 2: Learning goals ==== 
- 
-  * Predict the motion of a single-particle system executing constant velocity or constant acceleration motion using appropriate representations (this includes verbal, graphical, diagrammatic,​ mathematical,​ and computational representations). 
-  * Collect, analyze, and evaluate data to determine the type of motion and the properties of the motion of a single-particle system. 
-  * Evaluate the applicability/​limitations of models and the validity of predictions for different types of motion. 
-  * Apply the momentum principle ($\Delta\vec{p}=\vec{F}\,​\Delta t$; $d\vec{p}=\vec{F}\,​dt$) iteratively/​computationally to predict the motion or determine the properties of motion/net force acting on a single-particle system where the net force is not constant (e.g., due to spring-like restoring forces or dissipative drag forces). 
- 
-</​WRAP>​ 
  • summer_2018/pcubed_intro_project.txt
  • Last modified: 2018/06/18 13:08
  • by tallpaul