Learning Targets
We can use signed numbers to represent time relative to a chosen point in time. We can think of this as starting a stopwatch. The positive times are after the watch starts, and negative times are times before the watch starts.
If a car is at position 0 and is moving in a positive direction, then for times after that (positive times), it will have a positive position. A positive times a positive is positive.
If a car is at position 0 and is moving in a negative direction, then for times after that (positive times), it will have a negative position. A negative times a positive is negative.
If a car is at position 0 and is moving in a positive direction, then for times before that (negative times), it must have had a negative position. A positive times a negative is negative.
If a car is at position 0 and is moving in a negative direction, then for times before that (negative times), it must have had a positive position. A negative times a negative is positive.
Here is another way of seeing this:
We can think of as 3 • 5 as 5 + 5 + 5, which has a value of 15.
We can think of 3 • 5 as (-5) + (-5) + (-5), which has a value of -15.
We can multiply positive numbers in an order:
3 • 5 = 5 • 3
If we can multiply signed numbers in any order, then -5 • 3 = -15.
We can find -5 • (3 + (-3)) two ways:
That means that:
Which is the same as:
So:
There was nothing special about these particular numbers. This always works!
A traffic safety engineer was studying travel patterns along a highway. She set up a camera and recorded the speed and direction of cars and trucks that passed by the camera. Positions to the east of the camera are positive, and to the west are negative.
Table for Problem 1
Table for Problem 3
Table for Problem 4
Around noon, a car was traveling -32 meters per second down a highway. At exactly noon (when time was 0), the position of the car was 0 meters.