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Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the 21st Century A Project of Joliet College, Lee College and the National Science Foundation
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Page 1: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Analysis of MotionAn Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in

the WINDOWS platform

By

David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D.

June 2000TYC Physics Workshops for the 21st Century

A Project of Joliet College, Lee College and the National Science Foundation

Page 2: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Preface

Page 3: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

The purpose of this tutorial is help students start using the Videopoint program to collect and analyze data.

It was designed for a student who has never used the Videopoint program.

By following the step by step format the student will be able to:

import a video clip and collect a number of data points from the clip.

produce a graph of the data.

fit a curve to the data (model).

describe the motion from an equation generated by the curve fit.

Specific examples were used to analyze an object with a constant velocity and a constantacceleration.

The tutorial also contains information on how to edit a video clip using QuickTime Pro.

A separate folder is included with several original video clips which can be used for analysis.

Page 4: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

A Very Brief Review ofMotion According to

Galileo

Page 5: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Aristotle’s ideas about motion did not satisfy Galileo’s experimental results.

In order to understand and to predict the motion of an object, Galileo abandoned Aristotle’s point of view.

Galileo invented the concept of inertia. That is, an object will continue to do whatever it is currently doing.

Page 6: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

If the object is moving it will continue to do so.

If the object is at rest it will remain at rest.

Galileo’s experiments helped him understand the concept of inertia.

His experiments helped him formulate his ideas about two important concepts dealing with moving objects.

Page 7: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

The concepts are velocity and acceleration.

In order to understand these concepts we must understand what it means when an object moves.

We will say a change of location of an object defines motion. See the object below

New Position

Page 8: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

You notice that the object’s position constantly changed as time went by.

This is proof that motion has occurred.

That which the moving object has is called velocity.

Watch again.

New Position

Page 9: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

If you could mark distance intervals and measure the time it takes for the object to move through the intervals you would then measure its velocity.

Equal Time Intervals

Page 10: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

If the object moves through a distance in the same time interval for each distance interval then the object has a constant velocity.

If we could mark the location of the object in distance and time from a reference then we could easily measure how it moved. Click the mouse to mark the location of the object after each time interval. The object below has a constant velocity.

Origin orReference

Equal Time Intervals

Page 11: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

If the object moves through larger distances in the same time for each distance then the object has an acceleration.

If we could mark the location of the object in distance and time from a reference then we could easily measure how it moved. Click the mouse to mark the location of the object after each time interval.

The object below has an acceleration.

Origin orReference

Equal Time Intervals

Page 12: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Click on the image below and watch an actual moving object.

Page 13: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

If there was a method of marking the actual video you just viewed it would be possible to take measurements and calculate the velocity of the rolling ball using a computer.

There is such a method and it utilizes a powerful video analysis program called Videopoint.

We will now use the short video clip and analyze it using Videopoint.

Page 14: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

The following sequence will take you through the steps needed to analyze a video clip using Videopoint.

1. Starting the Program2. Importing a Movie Clip3. Playing a Movie4. Collecting data points5. Scaling the Frame6. Analyzing the Data

Page 15: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

1. Starting the program

The Videopoint program is already loaded in the computer.Click the Videopoint icon .

Page 16: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Here is the first screen you see…click on it to start

Page 17: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Select OPEN MOVIE

Page 18: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Select the clip you would like to to import into VideoPoint from the directory containing the clips

The clip can be previewed here

Play the clipusing thiscontrol bar

2. Importing a Movie Clip

Page 19: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

The movie clip will open and be displayed like this

Input the number of objects you will study…in this case1

Page 20: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Main Window

Movie Area

Table Window

Coordinatesystem window

Toolbar

Page 21: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

3. Play a Movie Clip

This is the movie control bar..use it toplay the movie or advance it frame byframe

Page 22: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

The object will begin to move

Click here and the movie plays

Page 23: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

4. Collecting Data Points

Page 24: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

The cursor is moved over the object and the mouse button is clicked

Be sure to have this icon selected before you attempt to take data

This saves a data point with location and time as the coordinates

Page 25: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Continue clicking on the moving object

Page 26: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Continue the point and click routine

Page 27: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Continue the point and click routine

Page 28: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Continue the point and click routine

Page 29: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

You can see the data points on the movie area if you select the trails box

Trails Box

Page 30: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

It is useful to scale the frames…that is to select an object of known length

so the the program “knows” how big a distance interval is

Click on this icon

Insert 1 here and Meter here to set the scale of 1 meter

5. Scaling the Frame

Page 31: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

There is meter stick in the frame click on the beginning of the meter stick then…….

Page 32: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Click on the other end….the program now knows how long a meter is in the frame

Page 33: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

6. Analyzing the Data

Page 34: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Analyzing the Velocity Data

Page 35: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

We can now graph the data select the graph icon from the toolbar

Graph icon

Graphing the Data

Page 36: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Select position from the pull down menu

Position

Leave the Horizontal Axis as timeLeave the Vertical Axis as seen

Page 37: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

This is a plot of Position (Displacement) vs Time

Page 38: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Now you can have the program fit a curve to the plot

Select this icon

Select linear since you estimate a linear function constant velocity

Analyzing the Data

Page 39: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

A best fit curve is drawn through the points and an equation is displayed

Equation

Curve

Page 40: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Here is the data table for the data collected notice that time went ahead but nothing was recorded it wasn’t until the 43 frame that displacement data was collected

Notice the time interval for 15 frames per second is 0.067 secondsEach frame advances by that amount

Page 41: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Analyzing Acceleration Data

Page 42: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

View the following clip by clicking in the black box above

Page 43: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Import the video clip as before

Page 44: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Collect the data as you did with the velocity video clip

Page 45: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

By displaying the trails you can easily see that the distance the object travels increasesfor a fixed time interval……this is proof that the object is accelerating

Page 46: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Select the type of curve…in this casea polynomial

It is easily seen that this is not a straight line but a curved line

Page 47: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

The curve which fits the data describes a parabola

The formuladescribing the curve is seenhere

Page 48: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Several More Advanced Techniques

Changing the Origin

Editing a Video Clip

Page 49: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Changing the Origin

Page 50: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

The origin of the movie is a fixed point in each frame.

That fixed point is the reference for thecoordinate system.

The origin by default is found at the bottom left of the frame.

It remains there for each frame of the clip.

Page 51: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Here is the (0,0) point, the origin for each frame in the clip.

Each (X,Y) pair is determined from this point

Page 52: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

For controlled videos the origin will be the same from frame to frame.

But suppose the origin moves because the camera was moved as in panning to keep the object in the field of view.

You will have to move the origin in each frame to an object which is seen in each frame.

Page 53: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Selecting a New Origin

Click on the image to view it

Here is the new origin

Notice that itis never in thesame place because the camera is panning

Page 54: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

You must step through each frame one at a timein order to mark the same point in each frame asthe origin.

To do that you must open the clip as before and just like you marked the moving object’s positionyou now mark the origin position in each frame.

This ensures that the origin is always located bythe program and the program always has a pointof reference.

Page 55: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.
Page 56: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.
Page 57: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.
Page 58: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.
Page 59: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.
Page 60: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Editing Movie Clips

Page 61: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Here is an example of a clip which will need to be edited

Click on the image above to see the clip

Page 62: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Start the QuickTime Player

Page 63: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Select FILE from the pull down option and select OPEN MOVIE

Using this program you can open an AVI file

Page 64: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

The unedited video clip is now opened

Page 65: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

By dragging this control locate the frame in the clip to set as the beginning of the edited clip

Page 66: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Now drag this piece to the set point of the beginning frame

This shaded area represents the front piece of the current video clip you will remove

Page 67: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

From the pull down EDIT select the CUT option

Page 68: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

The slide control now moves to the beginning position…..

Page 69: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Now move the control to the end or last frame you want in your video clip

Page 70: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Now drag the controls to the back end of the frame marker

the shadow are represents what will be cut

…first the forward one than the back one

Page 71: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Select the EDIT from the pull down and then select CUT to cut the remainder of the clip

Page 72: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Notice the last frame is in the window and the control marker is all the way to the endof the control bar indicating the edit is now done

Page 73: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

To save the video as a .MOV file select EXPORT from the FILE pull down

Page 74: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Give the new file a name

Then selectsave to save theedited video clip

Save the file as a MOV file for direct inputto the Videopoint program

Page 75: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Final edited video clip

Click on the image to view it

Page 76: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Making A Video Clip

Page 77: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Making a video clip is straight forward.

You can use any video camera to do this.

However, the following points should be considered in producing a clip suitable for analysis using the

VideoPoint program:

Use a tripod Level the camera

Page 78: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

For the most accurate results the video camera should be perpendicular to the moving object.

Click on image to view

Page 79: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

The object should move across the video camera’s field of view (FOV) without the camera having to pan as the object moves.

Click on image to view

Page 80: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Keep the FOV constant during the taping….

DO NOT zoom in on the moving object.

Click on image to view

Page 81: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

A reference object of know length should be included in the FOV. This object could be a ruler or a know dimension in the FOV such as the width between fence posts or the size of the moving object.

Click on image to view

Page 82: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

Remember in a laboratory setting you can control many variables which would affect the accuracy of the final video clip you will use for analysis.

The technique used in producing your own controlled video clip in the laboratory will be the basis on which you plan your recording of an event in the field.

Page 83: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

1. Maintain perpendicular alignment with the moving object.

2. Select a vantage point to video the event such that you do not have to pan the camera.

3. Include an object of know length in the FOV with the moving object.

4. Keep the FOV constant during the taping.

Page 84: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

All of the video clips included on this CD-ROM have been made using the previous 4 criteria.

Examine the included video clips and you will start to understand how to produce accurate video clips yourself.

Eventually the technique you develop will allow you to collect accurate data from your video clips.

Page 85: Analysis of Motion An Introductory Tutorial using VideoPoint in the WINDOWS platform By David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D. June 2000 TYC Physics Workshops for the.

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