projectile motion.two-dimensional motion.
It would depend on what the angle is, what it is deflected off, and if its all straight then.... South
A trajectory is the angle made with the horizontal when a projectile is fired. Suppose the projectile is a cannon ball. Assuming air is frictionless, that cannon ball will travel the greatest distance if the trajectory is 45 degrees from horizontal.
Very many things. An ant, for example.
The incoming angle is the angle at which something comes at some other object. For example if you hit a ball on a pool table against the side, the incoming angle is the the angle at which the ball comes at the table.
A cannon ball.
a cannon ball
the size of the cannon ball depends on the size of the cannon. civil war cannons had cannon balls about the size of a child's head, aprox 30cm across
Yes, both have the same energy, but because cannon is heavier the cannon ball gets more momentum and thus greater velocity.
cannon ball
pizza , cake, kicking a soccer ball in a goal.
The cannon would want to move backwards with the same speed as the ball wants to move forward.
Ballistics is just what it sounds like. A cannon ball was fired over and over and a statistical record was kept. Weight of the ball, powder used and cannon angle. The ball will have straight linear motion with gravity thrown in for fun. You can be traveling in a very straight forward motion, but be falling also. Newton had this all figured out.