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Qmechanic
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Escape velocity

I have several confusions regarding escape velocity. I am sure I am missing something(s) obvious or maybe I am taught wrong.

  1. Lets say we throw an object of any mass at exactly escape velocity of earth calculated from $v^2=\frac{2GM}{r}$ which is almost $11Km s^{-1} $ but i am talking about exact escape speed.
    That ball initially has $KE=\frac{1}{2}mv^2$ and $PE=mgh$ Wikipedia says and i quote

In physics, escape velocity is the speed at which the kinetic energy plus the gravitational potential energy of an object is zero.

How is that possible? 2. As $F=\frac{GmM}{r^2}$ no matter how much the particle travels away from earth's surface it will always be accelerated towards earth. With increasing $r$ the $F$ will decrease but it will never reach $0$. That means that there will be no point where the particle will stop and will continue to move with slower and slower speed will never reaches zero. Am I right? 3. A request: Please explain exactly what happens to particle's $KE$ and $PE$ at different points such as at $r=0$ and at $r=\infty$.

Suchal
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