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Components of velocity in projectile motion [closed]

I came across this question in my physics textbook (Gr12) and I was hoping someone could explain the solution to me A ball is thrown horizontally off a building at $8.2\,\text{m}/\text{s}$. At a ...
Nathan's user avatar
  • 3
0 votes
2 answers
49 views

Equations of motion for constant acceleration

I read that the equations of motion for a constant acceleration can be represented in a scalar form as well as a vector form, but what's the need to do them in vector form what extra can we do by ...
Manish's user avatar
  • 51
0 votes
1 answer
83 views

${}$ Projectile motion

Basically we take the value of acceleration due to gravity as -ve ($-g$),when an object is thrown in the opposite direction of $g$. But in projectile motion the object first opposed the g and travels ...
user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
786 views

How can I calculate the intercept direction of a constant accelerating missile?

I'm simulating missiles in 3d space and want the missiles to intercept a target which has constant velocity. Given the targets velocity is "u" a vector and the missiles acceleration rate is &...
akifdur's user avatar
  • 21
1 vote
1 answer
143 views

How to know which solution is physical?

When solving the expression for displacement of an accelerating object and solving for the time variable: $$v_it+\frac{1}{2}at^2=d$$ $$v_it+\frac{1}{2}at^2-d=0$$ $$t=\frac{-v_i\pm \sqrt{v^2_i+2ad}}{a}$...
user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
38 views

What numbers would I apply to the equation $y=y_o+v_ot+\frac 12at^2$ using this simulator?

Using a Projectile Motion Simulutator (selecting INTRO from the four choices), I set the height of the Cannon at $15 \ \text{m}$, Initial Speed = $8 \ \text{m/s}$, the bulls-eye at $13.9 \ \text{m}$. ...
יהודה's user avatar
2 votes
7 answers
4k views

The direction of the velocity of a body can change when its acceleration is constant. How is it possible since acceleration is a vector quantity?

As we already know that acceleration is a vector quantity which means that it has both direction as well as magnitude. It can also change given any one of the two or both (magnitude and direction) ...
Snehal Saurabh's user avatar
1 vote
5 answers
5k views

Why is the acceleration along $x$-axis during projectile motion equal to 0?

Why is the acceleration along x axis during projectile motion equal to $0$? And if it is equal to $0$ then the object shouldn't stop along x-axis after vertical velocity reaches $0$ along $y$-axis.
Ishika's user avatar
  • 15
-2 votes
2 answers
53 views

Projection of ball. find initial velocity [closed]

A cannonball is fired at an angle of 33 degree relative to the horizontal as shown in the figure bellow. It is 1930 meters in the horizontal direction from the point of launch to the point where the ...
Ankkita Sharma's user avatar
-6 votes
4 answers
676 views

Motion in a straight line [duplicate]

Velocity and acceleration are directly proportional to each other but in the case of throwing a ball up , at the top velocity is zero but acceleration is there. why?
Angeline varghese's user avatar
0 votes
7 answers
404 views

Vertical motion of an object

We define acceleration as $-9.8\frac{m}{s^2}$ for an object that is thrown upwards due to gravity. My question is when the object reaches maximum height at the point where it is about to turn around ...
Dixon's user avatar
  • 23
1 vote
4 answers
2k views

How can there be acceleration but no velocity at instant of maximum height when object projected upwards? [duplicate]

When we project an object vertically upwards its velocity at maximum height consider to be zero but still, it has acceleration due to gravity i.e $9.8\mathrm{m/s^2}$. But mathematically we know that ...
suraj rawat's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
5k views

Why is Speed of an object equal to square root of distance traveled multiplied square root of acceleration?

I wanted to find the relationship of the speed of a falling object in a vacuum at g=9.8 m/s2 compared to its distance. I wanted to get time out of the equation. When I plotted the relationship it ...
dlight's user avatar
  • 247
1 vote
1 answer
48 views

Calculating a free fall vector so its equals to its inverse vector while accounting for gravity

I'm a game developer, and I've been struggling with a kinematics problem in the development process of my current project. I have some stationary objects that are suddenly affected by gravity after a ...
Thrindil's user avatar
0 votes
3 answers
139 views

Should not the acceleration acting on the stone being dropped be $a$ as well along with $g$?

the question is: A stone is released from an elevator going up with an acceleration a. The acceleration of the stone after the release is (a) a upward (b) (g-a) upward (c) (g-a) downward (d) g ...
Garima Singh's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
129 views

How do you correctly apply $a=v\cdot\text dv/\text ds$? [closed]

I know that $a=v\cdot\text dv/\text ds$ can be deduced by simple algebra and calculus and is correct. But once I was analyzing the motion of a ball projected straight up in free gravity. If I apply $...
Divyanshu Agarwal's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
238 views

Use of direction of downward velocity in equation of motion

[NOTE: I am not asking anyone to solve the question below but to point out where I might be wrong] Q- A skier jumps from a horizontal track and lands on a steeper track with a launch angle of ∅=11.3°(...
Uncertainly Certain's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
734 views

Confusion on Horizontal & Vertical Components of a Parabolic Motion

This was a question I found about projectile motion, the question was what's the bike's speed when it took off. Using $S=ut + 0.5at^2$, the time taken to reach the ground is $0.505 s$, they used ...
NJD's user avatar
  • 1
1 vote
3 answers
410 views

Can average acceleration be exactly determined from discrete points separated by equal time intervals? [duplicate]

I am using the American dialect of the English language. The following definitions distinguish my question from the similar, previously asked question: https://ahdictionary.com/word/search.html?q=...
Steven Thomas Hatton's user avatar
-2 votes
1 answer
519 views

2-D motion Question [closed]

A bottle dropped from a balloon reaches the ground in 20 s. Determine the height of the balloon if (a) it was at rest in the air and (b) it was rising with a speed of 50 m/s when the bottle was ...
TitanJedi's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
55 views

-16 represents acceleration?

A physics teacher put a ball at the top of a ramp and let it roll down toward the floor. The class determined that the height of the ball could be represented by the equation, $h=-16t^2+4$, where the ...
user avatar
0 votes
3 answers
2k views

Does a ball, when thrown into the air, ever experience an instant of rest? [duplicate]

Say I walk outside and throw a ball into the air. Obviously it will decelerate as it travels upward due to Earth's gravity, and accelerate as it travels downward for the same reason. But is the ball ...
Skyminer's user avatar
  • 163
0 votes
1 answer
134 views

Direction of $g$ acceleration ball projection

Why is the answer A? Because I thought it's C, because g acts downward and since the ball is moving downwards towards N, acceleration should be "g" and not "-g" as it was when it was being thrown up ...
user141153's user avatar
1 vote
3 answers
149 views

Projectile Motion - $V_f = V_i + at$ - Divide by zero

If I have a projectile that is thrown at some horizontal velocity at some height, and horizontal acceleration is zero, can't I use the equation $v = v_0 + at$? The problem is when I use it since $v$ ...
Bhaskar's user avatar
  • 113
24 votes
7 answers
10k views

Can an object *immediately* start moving at a high velocity?

What I mean is, suppose a ball is fired from a cannon. Suppose the ball is moving at 100 m/s in the first second. Would the ball have started from 1m/s to 2m/s and gradually arrived at 100m/s? And is ...
Siddharth Jossy's user avatar
-6 votes
2 answers
4k views

How to calculate initial acceleration of a projectile motion? [closed]

I have an object following a projectile motion, that hasn't got horizontal acceleration but only vertical -g. What is the acceleration that I have to use in the second law of motion (F = ma) in order ...
untitled's user avatar
  • 111
0 votes
4 answers
5k views

Force required to send ball in set trajectory

If I have a desired 2D trajectory where I know the desired speed of my ball and desired path, and a ball that starts at (x=0,y=0), how can I calculate the required force / point at which the force ...
Erica Fischer-Colbrie's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
59 views

Find the height and the velocity of the object [closed]

A bolt is detached from the lower part of an elevator cabin that is ascending with velocity 6meters/second and for 3 seconds comes to the point from where the elevator started to ascend. Find: in ...
prishila's user avatar
2 votes
9 answers
111k views

Why isn't the acceleration at the top point of a ball’s journey zero?

When I shoot a ball vertically upward, its velocity is decreasing since there is a downward acceleration of about $9.8\,\mathrm{ms}^{-2}$. I have read that at the top most point, when $v = 0$, the ...
Aaryan Dewan's user avatar
  • 1,790
2 votes
2 answers
6k views

Uniformly Accelerated Motion question

A ballast bag is dropped from a balloon that is 300 m above the ground and rising at 13 m/s. For the bag, find the maximum height reached. Now the book gives me this answer - $V_i$ = initial ...
thankgodforthissite's user avatar
0 votes
3 answers
10k views

In a 2D problem with a thrown object, why is the acceleration along the x-axis equal to 0?

I'm starting Physics, and I don't understand why the acceleration along the x-axis is zero for an object thrown near the surface of the Earth. This may be problem specific, but I wouldn't know since I ...
Strawberry's user avatar